my_wan;4193367
Physics is defined empirically. You are the one assuming you know the physics without actually doing the experiment (empirical test). You are therefore mistaking your intuition for actual physics. That's why this thread is interesting in the first place because the actual physics is counterintuitive said:
thought[/I]) experiment when all spork has to do is set the craft on the treadmill backwards and no thought is required. Perhaps you should add that skepticism back into the equation, self skepticism.
Well, it is undeniable that physics is empirical, but that is not the same as simple trial and error, or dare I say it, speculation. You misunderstand me, I think. There is no trial or battles of wills for me. In this case, intuition and Newton's laws
are enough to describe what is happening. Counter-intuitive examples, may also be sophisms
How it got beyond that point, is interesting.
Before the Laws of Physics can be declared broken, it is at least necessary to first give them a beating.
If I am wrong, you will be able to tell me so. I ask you to please tell me how the following is flawed.
The real cart shown in the video, works this way.
As I have mentioned, this cart will only run faster than the wind, if the wind is variable. It will tend to run at the
peak wind speed. The builder mentions that the wind is variable, and it is obviously so.
Imagine that the cart is running along at walking pace. A gust of wind pushes the cart, so that its velocity is increased by say, 10%. The propeller is directly connected to the wheels, so it too will increase by 10%. Agreed?
The momentum of the body of the cart is therefore increased by 10%, (mv) but that of the propeller also increased by the same amount. If the mass of the propeller is high (as it appears to be), then much more energy is stored than by a cart alone. Note that the kinetic energy is increased by the square of that increase in velocity (1/2mv^2). The cart has now raised its kinetic energy by much more than is needed to maintain its current velocity.
It absorbs more momentum from the wind, because it presents a higher
load than a simple cart, but that energy is not dissipated due to simple resistance, but is
stored.
If the wind falls again, the overall momentum of the cart will mean that it tends to remain the previous velocity. Do you agree?
The next gust does the same, so the velocity "rathchets up" in this manner until the cart runs closer to the speed of the gusts, than any true average. That is all that this device does. It's a wind-driven flywheel.
I can point to clues and indicators shown in the video, that support this contention, but can tell me why that explanation does not work ?
Spork's model is similar. Its momentum keeps it running in a very similar manner. The belt is the wind. If the cart slows, momentum drives it until some small disturbance allows it to pick up more. That's it.
Newton's law of opposite and equal reaction, means that the cart will certainly not follow the belt backwards, because of the opposing 'thrust' of the propeller.
The cart 'mirrors' its input. Momentum does the rest. If it slows, then energy comes from the stored momentum to maintain that speed.
I agree it appears circular in description. The wheels drive the propeller, which drives the wheels, which drives..... Yes, but it
is only a balance of forces.
Find something to upset that balance, and it will move in the appropriate direction. However, there is a
bias, because if it slows, the momentum of the flywheel, a reservoir of energy, can be called upon to drive it forward again. It takes what energy it it needs; directly from the belt, or from stored momentum, so as to maintain that balance.
It is visibly so. It slips and slides about due to the low rolling resistance, and its precarious balance. So little work (force x distance) is being done.