ImaginalDisc
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2005
- Messages
- 10,219
I'm not terribly good at math, so I need help with a comparision of two different kinematic systems, please. It's been puzzling me.
There are two chains at the very edges of two different precipices. Each chain is 1000 meters long. Chain A is just over a 1000 meter drop. Chain B is just over a 10 meter drop. The entire system is completely frictionless, and the chains are assumed not to stack, but to just lie on the ground like limp noodles.
Here is where the kinematics kicks in:
The first link of each chain is nudged over their respective precipices.
Does each chain slip over the edge at the same rate, or does the chain slipping over the shorter drop slip over the edge at a lower rate?
There are two chains at the very edges of two different precipices. Each chain is 1000 meters long. Chain A is just over a 1000 meter drop. Chain B is just over a 10 meter drop. The entire system is completely frictionless, and the chains are assumed not to stack, but to just lie on the ground like limp noodles.
Here is where the kinematics kicks in:
The first link of each chain is nudged over their respective precipices.
Does each chain slip over the edge at the same rate, or does the chain slipping over the shorter drop slip over the edge at a lower rate?