Lesson 17: Literal Equations: Rearranging Physical Formulas

Solving for a Letter

A Literal Equation is an equation made mostly or entirely of letters (variables). In physics, these are our "Formulas." Solving a literal equation means rearranging the formula to isolate one specific letter.

Worked Examples

Example 1: The Geometry of Perimeter

Solve \(P = 2L + 2W\) for \(L\).

Example 2: Classical Motion

Solve \(d = vt\) for \(t\).

Example 3: The Ideal Gas Law

Solve \(PV = nRT\) for \(R\).

Example 4: Einstein's Mass-Energy

Solve \(E = mc^2\) for \(c\).

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

In Quantum Mechanics, we rarely work with numbers until the very end. We manipulate formulas. For example, we might start with the energy of a particle \(E = \frac{p^2}{2m}\) and need to solve for momentum \(p\). By rearranging the "Literal Equation," we find \(p = \sqrt{2mE}\). This ability to pivot between different physical properties mathematically is what allows physicists to derive new laws from old ones. You are now learning the "Algebra of Discovery."