Editing Talk:128: dPain over dt

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Applying dimensional analysis suggests the 'How much she's still in my life' has the same units as 'Pain'. This makes no sense.
 
Applying dimensional analysis suggests the 'How much she's still in my life' has the same units as 'Pain'. This makes no sense.
 
:Clearly you've not been through this kind of loss.  [[User:IdahoEv|IdahoEv]] ([[User talk:IdahoEv|talk]]) 19:23, 13 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
:Are you assuming k1 is dimensionless? AFAICT, k1 is frequency, k2 and d are time, and 'How much she's still in my life' is pain per time.
 
  
 
In addition, the explanation that pain will eventally reach zero after 'how much she's still in my life' reaches zero (either through drifiting apart or death?) 'after a number of years' is contradicted by the text of the comic (...we can be friends). Perhaps the formulation is incorrect?
 
In addition, the explanation that pain will eventally reach zero after 'how much she's still in my life' reaches zero (either through drifiting apart or death?) 'after a number of years' is contradicted by the text of the comic (...we can be friends). Perhaps the formulation is incorrect?
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My own experience is that K2, in my terms, is proportionate to the amount of denial you indulge in and inversely proportionate to the presence of someone else to help you pull through! Whatever, the cartoon provided a good amount of laughter which also helps.
 
My own experience is that K2, in my terms, is proportionate to the amount of denial you indulge in and inversely proportionate to the presence of someone else to help you pull through! Whatever, the cartoon provided a good amount of laughter which also helps.
 
--[[User:HandyAndy|HandyAndy]] ([[User talk:HandyAndy|talk]]) 19:36, 20 May 2013 (UTC) HandyAndy 20:35 BST, 2013-05-20 (ref ISO 1806 ;-))
 
: 'How much she's still in my life' should have dimension Pain/time (the same as dPain/dt) and k<sub>1</sub> has dimension 1/time. We don't know for sure, if 'How much she's still in my life' is a constant or a function, but if it is a constant, the solution of the ODE is as follows (Smartin: You forgot a pair of parentheses) [http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=dP%2Fdt+%3D+%28-k1*P%2BG%29*%281%2F%281%2Bexp%28-%28t-k2%29%2Fd%29%29%29]:
 
P(t) = c_1*(e^(k2/d)+e^(t/d))^(-d*k1)+G/k1.
 
:--[[User:Chtz|Chtz]] ([[User talk:Chtz|talk]]) 14:59, 22 July 2013 (UTC)
 
 
 
I just added the (IMO correct) solution to the ODE and marked the rest as incomplete/incorrect.
 
First of all, we can't say that less pain is "better". But assuming that, it's not enough that ''dPain/dt'' approaches 0 fast, but that P(t) itself gets smaller or at least does not increase unbounded. --[[User:Chtz|Chtz]] ([[User talk:Chtz|talk]]) 15:47, 22 July 2013 (UTC)
 
:We still have to figure out about what REAL equation is in the background. It's not relativity, entropy, or thermodynamics. But the picture looks familiar to me, my poor old brain just do not remember.--[[User:Dgbrt|Dgbrt]] ([[User talk:Dgbrt|talk]]) 18:47, 22 July 2013 (UTC)
 
::The first factor alone would describe a shifted {{w|exponential decay}}. The second factor is a scaled and shifted {{w|sigmoid function}}, more precisely the hyperbolic tangent shifted to have its inflection at ''(k<sub>2</sub>,0.5)'' and vertically scaled by ''d''. I'm not sure if that helps anyone, though ... --[[User:Chtz|Chtz]] ([[User talk:Chtz|talk]]) 08:40, 23 July 2013 (UTC)
 
 
 
This is a Desmos of the pain equation: https://www.desmos.com/calculator/req3jnplsc. Can someone check if my equation is a solution of the equation? When I change d, it seems to be favourable for d to be large. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.165.88|162.158.165.88]] 00:09, 18 September 2020 (UTC)
 

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