heh heh, my
physics teachers in high school hated when I used this phrase. But it's
useful, as well as being
good for a quick laugh, if you're around the right sort of people. I guess the only way to explain its use would be to give an example. Say you had a uniform distribution of charge covering a flat wall. Say you wanted to find the force on an electron 1 cm from that wall. The
exact (but clearly wrong) way to do this is to
integrate the electric field across the entire wall. The
less exact, but much, much easier method (and therefore the
Right Thing to do) is to say, hey, the wall is approximately infinite, so we can use the formula for E of an infinite sheet.
Ain't that cool?
And to Kung: Approximately infinite just sounds better than effectively infinite, wouldn't you agree?