Infinitely small?

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Davidc

Guru
Location
Somerset UK
solmisation said:
If anyone tells you that you are as thick as two short planks, just inform them that

1 Planck length= 10-35 meters

not really that thick!;)

You'll be his constant companion for ever afterwards....
 

Davidc

Guru
Location
Somerset UK
marinyork said:
Er, Pete, Calculus went off the "school" syllabus some time in the early-mid 80s.

Anyway I didn't see the programme. Presumably they were talking about "infinitely small" in terms of the big bang?

It went off the physics syllabus, but did it go off the pure maths one:?:
 
marinyork said:
Er, Pete, Calculus went off the "school" syllabus some time in the early-mid 80s.
...along with Compound Interest in Pounds Shillings and Pence no doubt (with the odd Guinea or Halfcrown thrown in) *snarl* *mutter*. ;):smile::angry:

Never mind.:smile: Certainly I needed the differential and integral bits (along with differential equations - Ordinary, not Partial) for my 'A'-level maths. Though I've forgotten most of it :sad:. Perhaps Shaun would care to set up a 'maths lessons' section on this forum :ohmy::ohmy::ohmy::biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:?
 

marinyork

Resting in suspended Animation
Location
Logopolis
Chuffy said:
Black holes were being bandied about. Beards were being worn and quasars were mentioned.

You don't need calculus to understand the infinite actually. It is actually based on other things and is real headbanging stuff. Anyway I've been trying to avoid muddying the discussion.

Right. Black Holes. These are generally believed to have singularities which are infinitely small because you have so much mass crammed into a small space there is a runaway gravitational effect, which makes things smaller and so gravity increases and so on. Of course because you can't see beyond the event horizon of a black hole, some people have speculated on all sorts of things such as singularities don't really exist (very much a minority view). It is best explained really in these sorts of programmes.
 
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I just googled 'event horizon' Marin - come well briefed for the FNRttC because it is a load of old <teatowels> to me...:smile:;)
 

garrilla

Senior Member
Location
Liverpool
aJohnson said:
1/n where n is infinitely big?

It is one of those mass confusions that infinite means 'big'.

Simply put, 'infinite' means a series which has no predicited ending. While n+1 is an example of an infinite series, so is n-1.
 

aJohnson

Senior Member
Location
Bury, Manchester
garrilla said:
It is one of those mass confusions that infinite means 'big'.

Simply put, 'infinite' means a series which has no predicited ending. While n+1 is an example of an infinite series, so is n-1.

Yup, pie is infinite and that isn't a "big" number.
 

Archie_tect

De Skieven Architek... aka Penfold + Horace
Location
Northumberland
Pie is delicious and in our house it most certainly is finite.
Pi, on the other hand.... ultimately must have a finite limit otherwise a circle couldn't exist in reality.
 

aJohnson

Senior Member
Location
Bury, Manchester
Archie_tect said:
Pie is delicious and in our house it most certainly is finite.
Pi, on the other hand.... ultimately must have a finite limit otherwise a circle couldn't exist in reality.

Damn, I'm not used to writing it as a word I seem to have got it confused with the food.

The value is infinite last time I checked though. It is a infinite sequence.
 
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