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HSC Tips - Mechanics (1 Viewer)

Grizzly

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Jizz -

"- Know how to work out escape velocity using inverse square law for gravity"

Have i missed something ?? :O
Thats not in the Arnold book ?!
 

McLake

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Originally posted by Grizzly
Jizz -

"- Know how to work out escape velocity using inverse square law for gravity"

Have i missed something ?? :O
Thats not in the Arnold book ?!
It's Physics, but you should probably know it for Maths
 

freaking_out

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Originally posted by OLDMAN
Use integral limits in solving mechanics rather than the more cumbersome 2-unit "integrate, add constant and check boundary conditions" way. See example in "trivial mechanics" thread.
adding onto this, i saw this other method where they incoporate the constant in the log....for example:

instead of v^2=ln(x^2+3)+C, where C is the intergration constant

they instead put:

v^2=ln(x^2+3)A, where A is a constant

c question 6 b (iii) of 2002 independent paper found on the other thread.:)
 

heath

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"- Know how to work out escape velocity using inverse square law for gravity"


please explain. i always get escpae vel q's wrong, and coincidently i don't know the inverse square law u speak of
 

McLake

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Originally posted by heath
"- Know how to work out escape velocity using inverse square law for gravity"


please explain. i always get escpae vel q's wrong, and coincidently i don't know the inverse square law u speak of

Inverse law says

g = k/r^2

so gravity is inversly proportional to radius squared.
 

heath

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o is that all. most questions tell u that anyways.

i thought it was something to do with that physics equation; escape velocity= sqrt of 2GM/r
 

ezzy85

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with these terminal velocty questions, is it enough to just say a = 0 and solve for v? or do you have to do all the integration with t and make t appraoch infinity?
 

freaking_out

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Originally posted by ezzy85
with these terminal velocty questions, is it enough to just say a = 0 and solve for v? or do you have to do all the integration with t and make t appraoch infinity?
i think u make t go to infinity.:confused:
 

heath

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nope our teacher alwasys lets a=o then solve for v.

cause when there is no acceleration it is at max velocity. u know that from 3 unit (SHM)
 
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ND

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Originally posted by freaking_out
aren't we talking about resistive motion but?:(
Yes but when something reaches terminal velocity, its acceleration stops.
 

vegeta_316

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Making t go to infinity and a=0 are both acceptable rules in determining terminal velocity. Just pick one determining on the question.
 

deyveed

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With Resisted Motion, when they tell you that the resistance is proportional to v^2 for instance, do you assume in the eqn that the v^2 part is mkv^2 or just kv^2?
 

Fosweb

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Depends on whether they mention if the object has a mass. If the object is massless (or of unit mass) then your equations are independant of mass (so F = ma becomes F = a)
 

ezzy85

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you include the mass because it will be cancelled out eventually.
 

deyveed

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Some questions in the textbook have mkv^2 and some just have kv^2.
Would the answer work out to be the same if you take either paths?
 

McLake

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Originally posted by deyveed
Some questions in the textbook have mkv^2 and some just have kv^2.
Would the answer work out to be the same if you take either paths?
One is talking about a Force (with m), the other is talking about an acceleration (no m).

The m always ends up cancelled anyway (as easy85 said)

m should NOT appear in the final answer
 

freaking_out

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i just had a look at the syllabus 2day, and i saw that they had some alright questions there....so its worth a look. also under harder 3u, the syllabus quotes some questions for circular geometry, which i saw was actually used in one of the trials.
 

Hotdog1

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On the mkv/kv thing, it depends on what the question describes the term to represent. I've seen questions when they said the resistive FORCE is kv^2, therefor the mass m is incorperated in kv^2.
 

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