Be sure to share your comments in the Class Participation section below -- that's the best part! You can turn pages with the arrows on your keyboard ← →.
Join the conversation! There are now 10 comments... what are your thoughts?
Actually, I lied before about that being all. This page, I hear something like a dubstep drop in my head when I view it.
Keep up the good work my man; these are fun and excellent.
I keep reading “delta C” as “change in C”, which makes me think about a song composed in the key of C changing from major to minor (or minor to major) right in the middle of the song.
Exactly. Here, of course, C refers to capacitance. The defence council changes the capacitance of the case, and by doing so can cause the charge to be changed.
Actually, I lied before about that being all. This page, I hear something like a dubstep drop in my head when I view it.
Keep up the good work my man; these are fun and excellent.
Thanks!
I mean, wub Wub WOB WHUAB WUBWHUABWOBWOBWHUABWUB
Such badassery. Good job on the series; it really helped me gain an interest in knowing the laws I’m irrevocably subject to.
I keep reading “delta C” as “change in C”, which makes me think about a song composed in the key of C changing from major to minor (or minor to major) right in the middle of the song.
Quite a renaissance man, aren’t you?
In physics “C” is shorthand for the speed of light in vacuum (3.00 X 10^8 m/s). This is also a constant, so delta-C is nonsensical.
Yeah, “∆C” is just lawyer shorthand for “defense counsel.” Just as the pi symbol is used for “prosecutor” and a star is used for law enforcement.
1: It’s “c” for lightspeed, not “C”
2: Symbols get used for different things in different contexts
Exactly. Here, of course, C refers to capacitance. The defence council changes the capacitance of the case, and by doing so can cause the charge to be changed.
(Sorry for that awful pun).
Oh god…