4 Chapter 1 (but with WP Quick LaTeX)
hey
Here’s a regular in-line equation [latex]\vec F_{12} = \frac{1}{{4\pi \varepsilon _0 }}\frac{{q_1 q_2}}{{r_{12}^2 }}\hat r_{12}[/latex]
Here’s the same equation centred with HTML in a styled <p>
tag with font-size 110% (PDF-compatible):
[latex]\vec F_{12} = \frac{1}{{4\pi \varepsilon _0 }}\frac{{q_1 q_2}}{{r_{12}^2 }}\hat r_{12} \label{Coulomb2}[/latex]
Here’s the same equation centred with HTML in a styled <p>
tag with font-size 113% (PDF-compatible):
[latex]\vec F_{12} = \frac{1}{{4\pi \varepsilon _0 }}\frac{{q_1 q_2}}{{r_{12}^2 }}\hat r_{12} \label{Coulomb3}[/latex]
Now in a styled <p>
tag with \large LaTeX command (PDF-compatible):
[latex]\large \vec F_{12} = \frac{1}{{4\pi \varepsilon _0 }}\frac{{q_1 q_2}}{{r_{12}^2 }}\hat r_{12} \label{Coulomb4}[/latex]
For reference, here’s an equation that is centred with HTML, PDF-compatible, but not specifying size — it was coming out smaller:
[latex]\vec F_{12} = \frac{1}{{4\pi \varepsilon _0 }}\frac{{q_1 q_2}}{{r_{12}^2 }}\hat r_{12} \label{Coulomb5}[/latex]