
lecture14
... Sum all forces and divide by mass to find COM’s linear acceleration For each force, compute perp-dot-product from COM to point of force application and add value into total torque of COM Divide total torque by the MOI at the COM to find angular acceleration Numerically integrate linear/angular accel ...
... Sum all forces and divide by mass to find COM’s linear acceleration For each force, compute perp-dot-product from COM to point of force application and add value into total torque of COM Divide total torque by the MOI at the COM to find angular acceleration Numerically integrate linear/angular accel ...
HW7
... vcom , values for the initial velocities were used. Since the system is isolated with no ...
... vcom , values for the initial velocities were used. Since the system is isolated with no ...
From last time… - University of Wisconsin–Madison
... the immediate transfer of Descartes and Galileo. • This makes a connection with our intuitive understanding of ‘force’ as a push or a pull. ...
... the immediate transfer of Descartes and Galileo. • This makes a connection with our intuitive understanding of ‘force’ as a push or a pull. ...
Relationships between linear and angular motion Examples
... aR = vT2/r = (ωr)2/r = ω2r • This relationship demonstrates: – for a given r, higher vT is related to a higher aR; which means a higher force is needed to produce aR (i.e., to maintain curved path). – for a given r, higher w is also related to a higher aR; which means a higher force is needed to pr ...
... aR = vT2/r = (ωr)2/r = ω2r • This relationship demonstrates: – for a given r, higher vT is related to a higher aR; which means a higher force is needed to produce aR (i.e., to maintain curved path). – for a given r, higher w is also related to a higher aR; which means a higher force is needed to pr ...
force
... F=ma Acceleration is directly proportional to force. Acceleration is inversely proportional to mass. ...
... F=ma Acceleration is directly proportional to force. Acceleration is inversely proportional to mass. ...
Air Resistance
... initially fall freely with an acceleration of g and the distance will grow quadratically in time. As the object speeds up, the resistive force will grow, and we expect the acceleration to decrease. Thus the object’s distance will grow less rapidly than that of an object undergoing free fall. Eventua ...
... initially fall freely with an acceleration of g and the distance will grow quadratically in time. As the object speeds up, the resistive force will grow, and we expect the acceleration to decrease. Thus the object’s distance will grow less rapidly than that of an object undergoing free fall. Eventua ...
Ch 7: Momentum Conservation
... slams into a glass office building: all of these are examples of one-dimensional (straight line) collisions. For these, pay extra attention to direction: define one direction as positive and the other as negative, and be sure everybody gets the right sign. A firecracker in mid-air explodes … two chi ...
... slams into a glass office building: all of these are examples of one-dimensional (straight line) collisions. For these, pay extra attention to direction: define one direction as positive and the other as negative, and be sure everybody gets the right sign. A firecracker in mid-air explodes … two chi ...
Physics, Chapter 10: Momentum and Impulse
... The impact between two isolated bodies in space may be most easily understood in terms of the principle of conservation of momentum. In addition, many problems of propulsion may be most easily understood in terms of momentum conservation. Consider the problem of an airplane moving through the air. W ...
... The impact between two isolated bodies in space may be most easily understood in terms of the principle of conservation of momentum. In addition, many problems of propulsion may be most easily understood in terms of momentum conservation. Consider the problem of an airplane moving through the air. W ...