All Questions
5 questions
3
votes
2
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614
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Understanding dependent/independent variables in physics
How does one determine the independent and dependent variables?
What do the terms mean?
Can they be derived from a formula?
For example I saw in a textbook $F = k\Delta l$, Hooke's Law, that $F$ is ...
2
votes
0
answers
143
views
Understanding the Degrees of freedom of a Ballbot
A Ball Balancing Robot is dynamically stable robot capable of omnidirectional motion. It possesses non-holonomic properties and is a special case of underactuated system, classified as a Shape-...
1
vote
4
answers
1k
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What are the degrees of freedom of a dumbbell?
Edit 1: May be I should modify my question after getting the answers. I see why $(X_c, Y_c, Z_c, \theta, \phi)$ are legitimate Dof's of the dumb-bell, I never had any problem with that.
Please ...
1
vote
2
answers
88
views
Why the notion of degree of freedom is correct?
The intuitional definition for number of degrees of freedom is following: it is the minimal amount of numbers which allows us to describe the system's configuration correctly.
For example, for dot ...
0
votes
2
answers
217
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Dynamics: why do physicists include derivatives like $\dot{\theta}$ in the state space for a system like a pendulum?
I come from statistics, so my experience with physics is spotty, especially on some simple stuff. I have been working on some applications related to control theory lately, and was looking at some ...