BELIEVE   ME   NOT!    - -     A   SKEPTICs   GUIDE  

. . . error).5.1
More on this later . . . .
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. . . thing;5.2
``Uncertainty'' is somewhere in between.
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. . . $\delta x$?5.3
Notational convention: we use $\Delta x$ to denote ``a change in x, not necessarily tiny'' whereas $\delta x$ usually means ``a little bitty change in x, but definitely finite!'' and dx means ``a change in x that is so teensy that it can be neglected relative to anything else but another really teensy thing.'' That last one (dx) is called a ``differential'' - Mathematicians don't like it much but Physicists use it all the time.
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. . . by:5.4
The symbol ${\displaystyle \sum_{i=1}^N}$ represents an operator called ``summation'' - it means that {the stuff to the right of the $\Sigma$}, which will always have a subscript i in one or more places, is to be thought of as the `` $i^{\rm th}$ term'' and all such terms with i values running from 1 to N are to be added together to form the desired result. So, for instance, ${\displaystyle \sum_{i=1}^N} \; x_i$ means $\{x_1 + x_2 + x_3 + \dots\ + x_{N-1} + x_N\}$, or (to be more specific) if N=3, just $\{x_1 + x_2 + x_3\}$. This may seem a little arcane, but it is actually a very handy compact notation for the rather common summation operation.
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Jess H. Brewer
1998-09-15