Carll68
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2009
- Messages
- 324
No, I have provided a range of values. I have told you why the amplification factor of *2* is not a constant. I've provided you with all manner of reasons why. It's ridiculous.
1/1.76 is a reasonable bottom-end estimate, as I've already told you. Could be even larger, even approaching 1*Fo. The answer is anywhere inbetween that and > 1/2. It is most definitely NOT exactly 1/2, as any real-world system with an amplification factor of exactly 2 is physically unreasonable.
A reminder...
[qimg]http://femr2.ucoz.com/_ph/1/440820712.png[/qimg]
Read it again, and TRY and understand.
Gave you the answer over a year ago. That you cannot comprehend that your cut and paste answer makes assumptions and provides a theoretical answer, not a real-world one, is your problem. Many examples in physics make assumptions about the real-world. Your quoted example is one of them. There's nothing wrong with that as such, until you say that a more correct answer which does take account of assumptions is wrong.
No. That is the one answer which is WRONG. It's a reasonable approximation.
I'll try one last time to help you see the *real-world*...
1) The question does not state the medium the experiment is conducted within. Correct ?
2) So the answer you say is correct should be the same whether it's done in air, or in treacle. Correct ?
3) The question does not state by how much the elastic string stretches before it breaks. Correct ?
4) So the answer you say is correct should be the same whether the string stretches by 1mm or 1 mile. Correct ?
5) If you drop a weight in air it falls at a different rate than it would in treacle. Correct ?
6) The surface area of the weight dropped in the treacle has an effect on it's drop rate when it's mass is taken into account. So the drag coefficient will affect it's drop rate. Correct ?
7) The time it takes for the elastic thread to break is not stated. Correct ?
8) How much the elastic thread stretches by before breaking, what medium the experiment is conducted within and the drag coefficient of the applied mass will all affect the time it takes for the elastic thread to break. Correct ?
Etc.
Do you understand the implications of the text in the included image ?
Specifically why (1+e-ζπ) is relevant in this context ?
"In practice damping is rarely included in calculations of this sort"
Tell you what. Ask some of the local physics bods. Let me know how you get on.
You are truly clueless,
you have failed to answer the question correctlly time and time again.
The question is what the question is. Anyone who truly understands physics beyond youtube and investigoogling can answer (and has answered---This problem has been solved correctly (13/9/05) by Qiu Shi Wang and Ying Cun Luo, freshmen at Peking University, China , and (13/9/05) by Chetan Mandayam Nayakar, a student at India Institute of Technology, Madras, India ) the question with ONLY the information given in the question.. just as you would on an exam.
IT IS THE ONLY INFORMATION YOU NEED.
You screaming "I need more info" only showcases your inability to understand physics to one and all who visit this thread.
You have failed. You are 100% incorrect in your answer. It is and always will be::: The thread will break if F=Fo/2
Never changes. But you don't get it. just like the object entering the tunnel, just like the conservation of momentum...you don't get it, you answered wrong..and you dance.
I am laughing at this dialog, just as others are. You FAILED. You answered WRONG. You continue to ANSWER INCORRECTLY. You pollute this forum with a dirth of uneducated nonsense, but you are too blind to see your own failures.
You have shown no work to validate your inane dime store physics nonsense...and you never will. You have only presented vapid excuses as to why you can not show your work. Your insipid nonsense would be hilarious was it not so pathetic.
My advice to you is to admit you are wrong, invest in an actual education, and get on with your life.
Doesn't get more uneducated than that folks.