Mapping
Stan
I read your posts with interest and to gain information. I am also
an engineer. I have a very strong mathematics background.
Your system appears to be precisely what you say. It is to use a
mathematics term a mapping of one system to another.
Mapping is done in math in order to find easier or more elegant
solutions. Unfortunately I have been away from my math for
many years. Electrical Engineers and other engineers commonly
use mapping.
Electricals use Laplace transforms to transform differential
equations into algebra problems. Then the problem is
transformed back into the original domain.
That mapping is a useful device is unquestioned.
I had a boss once who responded to my claim of problem solving
with an observation. Engineers are good problem solvers because
they create so many problems. I asked if I could help him with
the specifics after he explained them. No. He would resolve it
directly. A bright boss, who was not an engineer.
I wish I had the skills to figure what the actual mapping transform
was. It has just been too many years for me to put in the effort.
Perhaps someone here could take it up. Perhaps a thesis topic.
I respect those who are encouraging new discovery in my favorite
sport. Keep at it.
You simply do not, can not or will not understand CTE.
The primary reason is that real CTE is of another dimension of which you are unfamiliar with and have certainly never experienced.
CTE is real. Get used to it.
As i said before CTE is beyond what you and your engineering team can unravel at this time.
Stan Shuffett
Stan
I read your posts with interest and to gain information. I am also
an engineer. I have a very strong mathematics background.
Your system appears to be precisely what you say. It is to use a
mathematics term a mapping of one system to another.
Mapping is done in math in order to find easier or more elegant
solutions. Unfortunately I have been away from my math for
many years. Electrical Engineers and other engineers commonly
use mapping.
Electricals use Laplace transforms to transform differential
equations into algebra problems. Then the problem is
transformed back into the original domain.
That mapping is a useful device is unquestioned.
I had a boss once who responded to my claim of problem solving
with an observation. Engineers are good problem solvers because
they create so many problems. I asked if I could help him with
the specifics after he explained them. No. He would resolve it
directly. A bright boss, who was not an engineer.
I wish I had the skills to figure what the actual mapping transform
was. It has just been too many years for me to put in the effort.
Perhaps someone here could take it up. Perhaps a thesis topic.
I respect those who are encouraging new discovery in my favorite
sport. Keep at it.