If you'll look closely, you can see some kind of differential equation on the truck.
What does it mean? Often the random math/science tidbits dropped into the simpsons actually mean something
>>7934688
Looks Navier - Stokesy but I don't recognize that notation, maybe an engineer's notation?
Probably related to fluid mechanics, hence the joke
>>7934701
I don't think it's Navier-Stokes, RT is a common product in thermo and stat mech. So perhaps something from there.
>>7934714
>thermo
Yeah the first part looks like a diffusion equation. Maybe something to do with solutions/mixtures
Looks P.Chemmy, though likely it's just a random assortment of terms.
>>7934688
It means they don't know when to write a d in cursive and when not.
It looks like it describes the motion of electrons in a electrochemical solution, the first part is diffusion and the second some sort of current in a electrochemical configuration (F is the Faraday constant und z the number of electrons per reaction)
>>7934802
>It means they don't know when to write a d in cursive and when not.
Are you mentally retarded? because they did it correctly in that pic
>>7934727
Doesn't someone on the staff have a Ph.D. In mathematics and likes putting stuff like this in the show or is that just futurama
>>7934802
>>7935634
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReOQ300AcSU
>>7934802
the simpsons were mathematicians
>>7935634
Together the writers have gotten the following
>magna cum laude with a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Harvard University
>master's degree in mathematics from UC Berkeley
>Mechanical Engineering major dropout
>magna cum laude with a bachelor's degree in physics from Harvard University
>master's degree in computer science from UC Berkeley
>cum laude with a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Harvard University
>summa cum laude with a bachelor's degree in applied mathematics from Harvard University
>Ph.D. in applied math from Harvard University
>PhD in inorganic chemistry from the University of Chicago
>bachelor's degree in cognitive neuroscience from Harvard University
>majored in physics and the history of science at Harvard University
>Ph.D. in computer science from Princeton University
>Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Yale University'