Greek is scurrying across the blackboard.
Some is familiar; a colony of pis are devouring a function.
There's a theta nesting in a cosine and
a pair of deltas are mating in the corner.
There are new species, though, foreign and loathsome.
A large one stakes out his territory inside a differential
daring anyone to disturb it, lest it sting or bite.
One student raises her hand, pointing at the thing.
"What is that?"
The professor grins,
takes his chalk and begins to dissect.
"It's not so different" he says, pulling it apart. "We call it a Ate-a.
Look here; here's an operand you know connected to a planck's constant.
They're both just over frequency and the speed of light
The parts are the same, just put together in a new way."
We're not assured, but we write it down in our field guides.
Next to the rho and its cousin omicron,
the del, which mimics the delta in shape only,
the common psi which Schrödinger taught a trick that changed the world,
the xi, its spawn and how to avoid them.
It's funny; so many people assume we took physics because
we have some sort of profound wonder or respect for these bugs
Really, though,
it's just that satisfying squish you get when you crush them in your hands.
Download Ebook technical manual wiki Free Kindle Books PDF
-
*Link Download technical manual wiki Internet Archive PDF*
Read technical manual wiki Nook Library Genesis
Studу Frее Bооkѕ Onlіnе рluѕ Dоwnlоаd еBоо...
3 comments:
:D lol at the end
I love how this variates between poetry and prose, good job.
First off, you probably meant "etymology" the study of roots of words, not "entomology," study of insects. =D
Not going to mention "its spawn."
And I don't know if "Ate-a" was deliberate or not ( = eta). Or that maybe psy is actually spelled psi.
Though I would have thought "a new way" especially after the frequencies to be "a nu way." =D
Interesting way to dissect physics, though I don't wish to crush my Greek alphabet in my hand. =D
Haha, I can always count on you Megan.
1) Actually, I do mean Entomology. I'm equating the letters (rather, what they represent) to bugs, though perhaps it's not as obvious as it should be.
2)>_> Okay, not gonna lie, that was embarrassing.
3) Ata-a is deliberate. Psy was not... changed that to psi =)
4) It's funny because I actually bounced back and forth between the two before finally deciding to go with the non-greek one.
Thanks as always for your criticism! =)
Post a Comment