Damping ratio (ζ) = 0.08What value did your calc use for damping?
In...
xmax = (F/k)(1+e-ζπ)
Damping ratio (ζ) = 0.08What value did your calc use for damping?
This discussion alone should be enough to prove to you that it is NOT high school level physics.
HARRIS’ SHOCK AND VIBRATION HANDBOOK said:The simplest model for a physical system that will respond to a shock or vibration excitation is given by a rigid mass supported by a linear spring, commonly referred to as a single-degree-of-freedom-system.
An ideal system may be considered undamped for mathematical purposes; in such a system the free vibration is assumed to continue indefinitely.
In any real system, damping (i.e.,energy dissipation) causes the amplitude of free vibration to decay continuously to a negligible value.
I'd just like to note that we were doing problems like this, and much more complicated ones, aged 16. If harmonic motion, including forcing and damping, is not taught until second year university at the earliest, it appears that education in the US is even worse than I thought.
From 1/1.76 to now 1/1.78.....I'd just like to note that we were doing problems like this, and much more complicated ones, aged 16. If harmonic motion, including forcing and damping, is not taught until second year university at the earliest, it appears that education in the US is even worse than I thought.
I do not believe you that you were doing differential equations at age 16, so spare me the drama....
People (often anonynous internet posters) always say crap like this about the US....and then they end up in the tutoring center once they get to Calc 1 or Calc 2 because they are failing the class.....then we have to tutor them through their math and physics classes even though they supposedly had a "better" education then we Americans did.
Regardless of what ANY of us did or didn't do at a certain age.....this problem is NOT a highschool physics problem.....differential equations is simply not a high school physics topic, sorry.
So please save useless and unverifible comments like this for someone else....no one is interested or impressed and it doesn't contribute to the original discussion in the slightest.
I think cuddles was being sarcastic.
from here --->>>> http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=2815761&posted=1#post2815761
This is just too freakin classic: The wording is a little bit weird, but yes, it's exactly F0/2.
You wasted all day for 2 days - trying to prove that a correct answer was an incorrect answer...following the fraud femrs lead and looking foolish in the process.
For a tight thread, all of these coefficients are not going to play a big role in a single oscillation
I find it funny how when you psoted to the linked physics forum, it took 2 posts to correct you, and put FEMR in his place...and...notice how his incorrect answer is now changed to another incorrect answer?
LOL...this is hillarious.
Wrong...FEMR is 100% incorrect.
The answer I supplied is 100% correct.
End of story.
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=2815761&posted=1#post2815761
. He tried to apply real-world mechanics to a complicated problem. You claim he doesn't understand physics because he made a different assumption and a perfectly valid assumption no less. This would be akin to you inquiring what the distance of a block was after travelling for 10/s and having an initial velocity 10 m/s and then claiming he was 100% wrong because he made an assumption on what frictional forces that block was under. Based on that, it's safe for me to assume that you don't know what the
you're talking about or that you're intellectually dishonest.You're using an equation of motion that is based on assumptions that do not apply in the real world. The actual equation of motion is:
mu'' + cu' + ku = p(t) where u is displacement
The post you've linked to has set c = 0. Femr2 has given c (the viscous damping coefficient) a definition and a reasonable one at that. I don't know if he arrived at that through investigoogling or if he took a graduate level engineering course in Dynamics of Structures. I would guess it is the former as he is unable to provide a rational defense of his answer except linking to papers.
Unfortunately for you, I've taken those classes, and used the knowledge garnered in them in my profession. Which means when you say that he's 100% wrong, I know that you're full of. He tried to apply real-world mechanics to a complicated problem. You claim he doesn't understand physics because he made a different assumption and a perfectly valid assumption no less. This would be akin to you inquiring what the distance of a block was after travelling for 10/s and having an initial velocity 10 m/s and then claiming he was 100% wrong because he made an assumption on what frictional forces that block was under. Based on that, it's safe for me to assume that you don't know what the
you're talking about or that you're intellectually dishonest.
For the question asked, the solution is exactly F0/2.
No if's, and's, or buts.
Point, blank, end of story.
He was and is and forever will be wrong in his answer, based on the question posed.
Off by one surd, I believe. I get approximately 1.08 terafurlongs per fortnight. Your units may vary..36C?
from here --->>>> http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=2815761&posted=1#post2815761
This is just too freakin classic: The wording is a little bit weird, but yes, it's exactly F0/2.
You wasted all day for 2 days - trying to prove that a correct answer was an incorrect answer...following the fraud femrs lead and looking foolish in the process.
For a tight thread, all of these coefficients are not going to play a big role in a single oscillation
I find it funny how when you psoted to the linked physics forum, it took 2 posts to correct you, and put FEMR in his place...and...notice how his incorrect answer is now changed to another incorrect answer?
LOL...this is hillarious.
If the collapse initiation is different from the NIST findings how does that prove explosives? It just proves that the collapse and fires that started them are all part of a chaotic event.