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-3 votes
1 answer
69 views

Show that $dE/dt = -bv^2$ (Help with differentiation) [closed]

The question is: Show that $$dE/dt = -b (dx/dt)^2.$$ And the solution is: ...
Theo's user avatar
  • 1
10 votes
7 answers
2k views

What can go wrong with applying chain rule to angular velocity of circular motion?

Lets say I have a circular motion, like this: I know that: $$\omega = \frac{\text{d} \phi}{\text{d}t}$$ Mathematically, what I am doing wrong, when I attempt to apply the chain rule in the following ...
zabop's user avatar
  • 597
4 votes
3 answers
2k views

What does "Just before" and "Just after" really mean in physics problems?

So I'm stuck in a dynamics problem that asks what is the acceleration of a body just after A, where A is the point that separates the motion of the body from a curvilinear path to projectile motion. ...
Normal_Vector's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
177 views

Find $v(t)$ and $x(t)$, How do I treat $δt$? [closed]

We apply a force to a particle with a mass $m$ and inicial velocity $v_0$: $$ F(t) = \left \{ \begin{matrix} 0 & \mbox{ $t<t_0$} \\ \frac{p_0}{\delta t} & \mbox{ $t_0<t<t_0 +\...
Kenaisp's user avatar
  • 39
0 votes
2 answers
1k views

Prove the Total Mechanical Energy of the System is Conserved via Differential Equations [closed]

Consider the dynamics of a particle P shown: Particle in 3D space with Radius r Newton's second law states that: $$\frac{d}{dt}(m\dot r) = \mathbf F$$ where, $\boldsymbol{r}$ is the position vector ...
Clark's user avatar
  • 129
1 vote
1 answer
287 views

A problem in newtonian physics [closed]

Hello! I have solved problem 89 using analytic way, i.e, the length of the string will always be constant, so repeated substitutions and differentiating will make way(i got answer as "c"). But is ...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
213 views

Lagrange's equation derivation Kinetic energy

I'm trying to reach Lagrange's equations by D'alembert's principle. $$\sum_{i=1}^N (m_i\ddot{\mathbf{x}}_i - \mathbf{F}_i)·\frac{\partial\ddot{\mathbf{x}}_i}{\partial q^\alpha}=0$$ or $$\sum_{i=1}^N ...
Kenaisp's user avatar
  • 39
0 votes
1 answer
274 views

Kinetic energy derivation: Why is $\frac{d \mathbf v}{dt} \cdot \mathbf v= \frac 12 \frac{d}{dt}(v^2)~?$

In Goldstein's Classical Mechanics 3rd edition, page 3, the Kinetic energy is derived by considering the work done on a particle by an external force $\mathbf F$ from point $1$ to point $2$ $$W_{12}=\...
user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
64 views

Angular dependence of the element of mass of an ellipse

I have an ellipse (a ring, not a disk; its center of mass in $C$) with a constant linear density and mass $m$, with semi-axes $a>b$; $\alpha$ is a dynamical angle describing the orientation of the ...
corey979's user avatar
  • 155
-1 votes
1 answer
569 views

Confusion in differentiation in physics problem [closed]

Here, we had to find theta such that the denominator has the maximum value. Being new to differentiation I basically didn't understand how differentiation solved the purpose: I basically didnt ...
oshhh's user avatar
  • 997
-2 votes
3 answers
29k views

Derivative of kinetic energy [closed]

I read that the derivative of kinetic energy=$F\cdot v$. I tried to differentiate (1/2) mv^2 with respect to time but each time I am getting $m*v$ and not $m*a*v$ which solves to $F*v$. My efforts are ...
Harmonic's user avatar
  • 274
0 votes
1 answer
360 views

a mistake related to variable mass system

I'm having a problem with finding my mistake when trying to find the derivative of the momentum when mass is being ejected in a constant rate. The problem is this - a body in space is burning fuel ...
user1708860's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
122 views

a problem on finding acceleration by differentiation

The displacement of particle along the $x$ and $y$ axis is \begin{cases} x(t)=\omega t-\sin\omega t\\ y(u)=1-\cos\omega t \end{cases} Upon differentiation, the velocity is \begin{cases} v_x(t)=\omega\...
imgodsparticle's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
318 views

Derivation of velocities in the Coriolis force

In Fitzpatrick's Newtonian Dynamics book on the Coriolis force, he states \begin{align} v_{x'}&\simeq V_0\cos\theta-2\Omega t V_0\sin\lambda~\sin\theta \tag{433}\\ v_{y'}&\simeq-V_0\sin\...
DLV's user avatar
  • 1,629
1 vote
2 answers
66 views

Trouble with derivation in an equation for Newton's Law of Angular Motion

I'm an autodidact and can't follow the part after "it is easily seen that"... which is the 31st equation: Shouldn't it be: $m_i\,{\bf r}_i\times \frac{d^2{\bf r}_i }{dt^2}= \frac{d}{dt}(m_i r_i \...
Gobiel's user avatar
  • 13
2 votes
1 answer
1k views

Taylor series expansion of $\ln$ and $\cosh$ in distance fallen in time $t$ equation

I want to find the Taylor expansion of $y=\frac {V_t^2}{g} \ln(\cosh(\frac{gt}{V_t}))$ I have tried using the fact $\cosh x= \frac {e^x}{2}$ for large t, which works, I just need help on small values ...
Weasel's user avatar
  • 345
0 votes
1 answer
282 views

What is the infinitesimal work done when the force is given by the gradient of a scalar function that depends both on position AND time?

The title is slightly confusing but I didn't know how else to phrase my question. Basically, this is the situation: When the force applied to a particle is given by the gradient of a scalar function ...
Joshua's user avatar
  • 1,373
1 vote
1 answer
384 views

Question concerning the Feynman Lectures of Physics

I am reading the Feynman lectures and at this point http://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_13.html#Ch13-S3 it says as follows: The time derivate of the potential energy is $\begin{equation} \...
user50224's user avatar
  • 527