It's Physics, but you should probably know it for MathsOriginally 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 ?!
do they go to the same school?Originally posted by Newbie
ezzy here is also a good candidate for 100 in both maths
in fact, ezzy > affinity ! :evilwhip:
adding onto this, i saw this other method where they incoporate the constant in the log....for example: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.
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
i think u make t go to infinity.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?
aren't we talking about resistive motion but?Originally posted by heath
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)
Yes but when something reaches terminal velocity, its acceleration stops.Originally posted by freaking_out
aren't we talking about resistive motion but?
One is talking about a Force (with m), the other is talking about an acceleration (no m).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?