J johnnybravo19 Full Member 10+ Year Member Joined Jul 8, 2012 Messages 33 Reaction score 1 Jul 17, 2012 #1 Members don't see this ad. I see it being used repetitively, but have no clue what it means
MedPR Membership Revoked Removed 10+ Year Member Joined Dec 1, 2011 Messages 18,577 Reaction score 57 Jul 17, 2012 #2 "S shaped" Upvote 0 Downvote
ebasappa Momma said knock you out. 10+ Year Member Joined Mar 25, 2012 Messages 272 Reaction score 84 Jul 17, 2012 #3 http://www.duncansonelectric.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/00-sinusoidal-pattern-1024x266.gif ^^ that shape Upvote 0 Downvote
http://www.duncansonelectric.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/00-sinusoidal-pattern-1024x266.gif ^^ that shape
circulus vitios Full Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Joined Jul 18, 2008 Messages 6,234 Reaction score 1,658 Jul 17, 2012 #4 Shaped like a sine wave, or s-shaped. Upvote 0 Downvote
MedPR Membership Revoked Removed 10+ Year Member Joined Dec 1, 2011 Messages 18,577 Reaction score 57 Jul 17, 2012 #5 Actually, I guess "S shaped" is more appropriate for "sigmoid". Whereas sinusoidal is shaped like a sine wave (as the others above have said). Upvote 0 Downvote
Actually, I guess "S shaped" is more appropriate for "sigmoid". Whereas sinusoidal is shaped like a sine wave (as the others above have said).
milski 1K member 10+ Year Member Joined Dec 30, 2009 Messages 2,640 Reaction score 527 Jul 18, 2012 #6 Anything which is either a*sin(b*x) or a*cos(b*x). In physics, most of the time these will be things related to simple harmonic oscillators - pendulums, springs, etc. Upvote 0 Downvote
Anything which is either a*sin(b*x) or a*cos(b*x). In physics, most of the time these will be things related to simple harmonic oscillators - pendulums, springs, etc.