Brian-M
Daydreamer
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2008
- Messages
- 8,044
If anyone's interested, here are the images Humber linked to a while ago. I've resized them, cropped them and indexed them to get the file size down to something manageable. While I was at it, I also added my own comments at the end in red.
BTW:
Humber, looking at the last of your posts I responded to, I think I'm getting an idea why you (incorrectly) believe you would have wind resistance while travelling at wind speed.
Are you thinking of wind speed as the average velocity of the air molecules, using their scalar values?
Wind speed is the average motion of the air molecules. You can only get that from their velocities by using vector values.
For example, draw some dots on a frisbee, and throw it.
The dots will not only be travelling forwards with the frisbee, but they'll be moveing side to side as the frisbee spins. As such, the average velocity of the dots will be much higher than the velocity of the frisbee.
If you use the vector values of the dots' velocity, the side-to-side motion cancels out, and the average motion of the dots is exactly the same as the frisbee-speed.
Wind speed is the average motion of the air molecules, not the average velocity.
BTW:
Humber, looking at the last of your posts I responded to, I think I'm getting an idea why you (incorrectly) believe you would have wind resistance while travelling at wind speed.
Are you thinking of wind speed as the average velocity of the air molecules, using their scalar values?
Wind speed is the average motion of the air molecules. You can only get that from their velocities by using vector values.
For example, draw some dots on a frisbee, and throw it.
The dots will not only be travelling forwards with the frisbee, but they'll be moveing side to side as the frisbee spins. As such, the average velocity of the dots will be much higher than the velocity of the frisbee.
If you use the vector values of the dots' velocity, the side-to-side motion cancels out, and the average motion of the dots is exactly the same as the frisbee-speed.
Wind speed is the average motion of the air molecules, not the average velocity.