
General Description of Motion
... • lower the ATP concentration - individual step rotations of 120o of the shaft were observed. • torque measured for each step rotation was 44 pN-nm, • calculated the work done by this rotary motor in each step rotation: a step rotation angle of q = 120o = (2p/3) • they found that W = (2p/3)(44 pN- ...
... • lower the ATP concentration - individual step rotations of 120o of the shaft were observed. • torque measured for each step rotation was 44 pN-nm, • calculated the work done by this rotary motor in each step rotation: a step rotation angle of q = 120o = (2p/3) • they found that W = (2p/3)(44 pN- ...
Principle of Impulse and momentum
... The bag A, having a mass of 6 kg, is released from rest at the position q = 0o. After falling to q = 90o, it strikes an 18 kg box B. If the coefficient of restitution between the bag and box is e = 0.5, determine (i) the velocities of the bag and box just after impact (ii) the loss of energy during ...
... The bag A, having a mass of 6 kg, is released from rest at the position q = 0o. After falling to q = 90o, it strikes an 18 kg box B. If the coefficient of restitution between the bag and box is e = 0.5, determine (i) the velocities of the bag and box just after impact (ii) the loss of energy during ...
Chapter 11 - UCF Physics
... relative to the origin O is defined as the cross product of the particle’s instantaneous position vector r and its instantaneous linear momentum p ...
... relative to the origin O is defined as the cross product of the particle’s instantaneous position vector r and its instantaneous linear momentum p ...
PES 3210 Classical Mechanics I
... Be able to determine if a force is conservative or not (curl=0 or force can be expressed as the gradient of a potential). Be able to calculate the gradient of a scalar function and the curl of a vector function (Cartesian coordinates only). Given a conservative potential function, know how to find a ...
... Be able to determine if a force is conservative or not (curl=0 or force can be expressed as the gradient of a potential). Be able to calculate the gradient of a scalar function and the curl of a vector function (Cartesian coordinates only). Given a conservative potential function, know how to find a ...
Collisions
... begin as one and then separate into many objects traveling in different directions. All collisions begin with determining the masses involved in the collision. We designate these as m1 and m2. In an explosion, these two masses are added together before the explosion. And counted separately after the ...
... begin as one and then separate into many objects traveling in different directions. All collisions begin with determining the masses involved in the collision. We designate these as m1 and m2. In an explosion, these two masses are added together before the explosion. And counted separately after the ...
08 lecture ppt
... The above system of equations can be solved for v at the bottom of the ramp. The result is the same as when using energy methods. (See text example 8.13.) It is static friction that makes an object roll. ...
... The above system of equations can be solved for v at the bottom of the ramp. The result is the same as when using energy methods. (See text example 8.13.) It is static friction that makes an object roll. ...
Rolling, Torque, and Angular Momentum
... momentum L is equal to the vector sum of the torques on the individual particles. These torques include internal torques due to forces between particles and external torques due to forces on the particles from bodies outside of the system. The forces between particles always occur in 3rd law pairs s ...
... momentum L is equal to the vector sum of the torques on the individual particles. These torques include internal torques due to forces between particles and external torques due to forces on the particles from bodies outside of the system. The forces between particles always occur in 3rd law pairs s ...
Physics 111
... Angular momentum • Rolling • Kinetic energy and forces of rolling • Rotational quantities as vectors • Cross product revisited • Torque as a vector • Angular momentum – conceptual • Newton’s second law in angular form • Angular momentum as a vector • Angular momentum of a system of particles • Angul ...
... Angular momentum • Rolling • Kinetic energy and forces of rolling • Rotational quantities as vectors • Cross product revisited • Torque as a vector • Angular momentum – conceptual • Newton’s second law in angular form • Angular momentum as a vector • Angular momentum of a system of particles • Angul ...
Relativistic angular momentum
""Angular momentum tensor"" redirects to here.In physics, relativistic angular momentum refers to the mathematical formalisms and physical concepts that define angular momentum in special relativity (SR) and general relativity (GR). The relativistic quantity is subtly different from the three-dimensional quantity in classical mechanics.Angular momentum is a dynamical quantity derived from position and momentum, and is important; angular momentum is a measure of an object's ""amount of rotational motion"" and resistance to stop rotating. Also, in the same way momentum conservation corresponds to translational symmetry, angular momentum conservation corresponds to rotational symmetry – the connection between symmetries and conservation laws is made by Noether's theorem. While these concepts were originally discovered in classical mechanics – they are also true and significant in special and general relativity. In terms of abstract algebra; the invariance of angular momentum, four-momentum, and other symmetries in spacetime, are described by the Poincaré group and Lorentz group.Physical quantities which remain separate in classical physics are naturally combined in SR and GR by enforcing the postulates of relativity, an appealing characteristic. Most notably; space and time coordinates combine into the four-position, and energy and momentum combine into the four-momentum. These four-vectors depend on the frame of reference used, and change under Lorentz transformations to other inertial frames or accelerated frames.Relativistic angular momentum is less obvious. The classical definition of angular momentum is the cross product of position x with momentum p to obtain a pseudovector x×p, or alternatively as the exterior product to obtain a second order antisymmetric tensor x∧p. What does this combine with, if anything? There is another vector quantity not often discussed – it is the time-varying moment of mass (not the moment of inertia) related to the boost of the centre of mass of the system, and this combines with the classical angular momentum to form an antisymmetric tensor of second order. For rotating mass–energy distributions (such as gyroscopes, planets, stars, and black holes) instead of point-like particles, the angular momentum tensor is expressed in terms of the stress–energy tensor of the rotating object.In special relativity alone, in the rest frame of a spinning object; there is an intrinsic angular momentum analogous to the ""spin"" in quantum mechanics and relativistic quantum mechanics, although for an extended body rather than a point particle. In relativistic quantum mechanics, elementary particles have spin and this is an additional contribution to the orbital angular momentum operator, yielding the total angular momentum tensor operator. In any case, the intrinsic ""spin"" addition to the orbital angular momentum of an object can be expressed in terms of the Pauli–Lubanski pseudovector.