Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The Earth's main field
- 2 Quiet-time field variations and dynamo currents
- 3 Solar–terrestrial activity
- 4 Measurement methods
- 5 Applications
- Appendix A Mathematical topics
- Appendix B Geomagnetic organizations, services, and bibliography
- Appendix C Utility programs for geomagnetic fields
- References
- Index
Appendix A - Mathematical topics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The Earth's main field
- 2 Quiet-time field variations and dynamo currents
- 3 Solar–terrestrial activity
- 4 Measurement methods
- 5 Applications
- Appendix A Mathematical topics
- Appendix B Geomagnetic organizations, services, and bibliography
- Appendix C Utility programs for geomagnetic fields
- References
- Index
Summary
This appendix presents a number of mathematical topics that arise in the book. The review is not meant to be comprehensive; it is limited to only items that could be helpful for understanding the flow of ideas in the chapters of this book.
Variables and Functions
Variable is the name we give to a value of something that changes. When we call a variable independent we mean that it can be any size within a prescribed physical domain of realistic values. A dependent variable is the value that we call a function of the independent variable. On a daily magnetogram, the magnitudes of the scaled H (a “dependent” variable) are dependent upon the selection of the “independent” variable of daily hourly time that we can take to be any value (in the domain) from 0 to 24. Maxwell's equations (Chapter 1) allow a unique field value to be determined from a given source-current distribution; however, given the field values, a number of possible currents might be the source. The dependent-variable field is a function of the independent-variable current. The extreme highest and lowest values of the dependent variable that occur over the domain of the independent variable define the range of the dependent variable.
The term function has a very special meaning in mathematics. When we say, for example, “the variable y is a function of the variable x” it is written as y = f(x).
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- Information
- Introduction to Geomagnetic Fields , pp. 280 - 295Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003