I suppose you can use [the two added equations] to compute the rate of change in distance between the two objects, only in a 1-dimensional case, but that rate isn't acceleration.
— noAxioms
It's not that it's simpler. Adding the equations only produces a useful result if there is no motion except along one axis. So for instance, under Newtonian mechanics, the ISS is continuously accelerating (coordinate acceleration) towards Earth at about 8.7 m/s² and yet its distance from Earth is roughly fixed, and its speed relative to Earth is also roughly fixed. This is because it is not a 1d case. The ISS has motion in a direction other than just the axis between it and Earth.
The ISS example also serves as a wonderful example of the difference between the physics definition of acceleration (rate of change in velocity=8.7 m/s² down) vs street definition (zero change in speed). — noAxioms
To use your car example, I am standing on the pavement not accelerating. I see one car (A) moving accelerating at 3m/s2 towards my left and another car (B) accelerating at 5m/s2 towards my right. That is simply the acceleration of the cars. It is meaningless (from a classical mechanics sense) to then add these up and say car A is accelerating at 8m/s2 from the point of view of the car B. Neither car is accelerating at 8m/s2. Car A is accelerating at 3m/s2 and car B at 5m/s2. — --`r
Any talk of orbital mechanics has velocity that is not parallel with the acceleration, and thus involves at least two dimensions. Orbits can be described in a plane. Only things falling straight up and down can be described in one dimension.I think we can deal with the Newtonian equation using only one dimention. — Gampa Dee
All frames of reference have 3 dimensions of space, and require 3 velocity components to describe.I don’t believe that Newton had a three dimensional frame of reference in mind
g is acceleration, but is simply a constant scalar. So the gravitational pull on the surface of Saturn is 1.08g. It would be wrong to say Saturn has a slightly larger g.However , to claim that g is not acceleration I still don’t get
Yes, and those orthogonal vectors make it at least a 2d situation.I fully agree that anything which has an orbit will have a combination of gravitational acceleration and sidereal velocity at the same time.
A frame of reference is a starting point, not something thrown in. Without it, any velocity is completely undefined.this, I’m certain can become very complicated if one throws in a frame of reference from which everything is calculated.
Orbital accelerations are always changing, even in the circular case. Remember that it is a vector.If the orbit isn’t circular (which most aren’t) there will be a change in acceleration
There's nothing special about M since it works with any M. Galileo actually published a tidy proof that the acceleration is independent of the mass of the thing accelerating.the acceleration of a body in freefall is GM/r...
What is it about this mass (M), that is so special that the smaller mass (m) cannot have any influence whatsoever on the acceleration?
No. Velocity is relative, so it makes sense to talk about velocity relative to the road, but acceleration is absolute. The cars are accelerating at 3 and 5 m/s² period. This is true in any frame. It is meaningless to talk about acceleration relative to something, including itself.I would agree that car A is accelerating at 3m/^s^2 and car B is accelerating at 5m/sec^2 relative to the road — Gampa Dee
Yes, that is what coordinate acceleration is. Change in velocity is absolute, even if velocity itself is not. If you're using a non-inertial frame, then you're taking the absolute coordinate acceleration of the other car and adjusting for the alternative frame you're using (in which Newton's laws do not hold), but the coordinate acceleration of the other car is still the same.Here, I am strictly speaking changes in velocities
The force 'felt' would be proper acceleration, also absolute.having nothing to do with the g force that "might" be involved, as in freefall, there is no force that is being felt by the accelerated body.
I think we can deal with the Newtonian equation using only one dimention.
— Gampa Dee
Any talk of orbital mechanics has velocity that is not parallel with the acceleration, and thus involves at least two dimensions. Orbits can be described in a plane. Only things falling straight up and down can be described in one dimension. — noAxioms
I don’t believe that Newton had a three dimensional frame of reference in mind
All frames of reference have 3 dimensions of space, and require 3 velocity components to describe. — noAxioms
However , to claim that g is not acceleration I still don’t get
g is acceleration, but is simply a constant scalar. So the gravitational pull on the surface of Saturn is 1.08g. It would be wrong to say Saturn has a slightly larger g. — noAxioms
A frame of reference is a starting point, not something thrown in. Without it, any velocity is completely undefined. — noAxioms
Orbital accelerations are always changing, even in the circular case. Remember that it is a vector. — noAxioms
There's nothing special about M since it works with any M. Galileo actually published a tidy proof that the acceleration is independent of the mass of the thing accelerating. — noAxioms
g is a constant. Saturn doesn't have a different g, it has a different acceleration a. The acceleration is dependent on mass and radius and has little direct connection with density, especially since density of any planet/star varies considerably at different depths. You complicating things needlessly by trying to work with area and/or density.The surface g acceleration is dependent to the mass density — Gampa Dee
Yea, a = GM/r²and Saturn, being a gaseous planet,would be much less dense than the earth . Would you have the equation for this?
The equations you referenced mention velocity, and velocity is meaningless without the frame reference.A frame of reference is a starting point, not something thrown in. Without it, any velocity is completely undefined.
— noAxioms
I was thinking something like Kepler using only distances and time period to make up his equations, and so not really using a frame of reference although it was implied I am sure.
Yes, but you listed all this Kepler stuff that shows how to do that just nicely.while when the orbit is elliptical, the magnitude of acceleration will be changing and a change in acceleration is a 3rd derivative, which makes the calculation more tedious , I would think.
Nothing in science is actually a proof, but the reasoning goes like this: You have two identical balls of mass M each. They presumably fall at the same rate. Now you connect them by a thin thread or spot of glue, creating one object of mass 2M. Either the connection makes some sort of magical difference, or the 2M mass should fall at the same rate as before. Hence the rate is independent of mass.I do have a hard time with this...is it possible to share this proof?
g is a constant. Saturn doesn't have a different g, it has a different acceleration a. — noAxioms
The acceleration is dependent on mass and radius and has little direct connection with density, especially since density of any planet/star varies considerably at different depths. You complicating things needlessly by trying to work with area and/or density. — noAxioms
I do have a hard time with this...is it possible to share this proof?
Nothing in science is actually a proof, but the reasoning goes like this: You have two identical balls of mass M each. They presumably fall at the same rate. Now you connect them by a thin thread or spot of glue, creating one object of mass 2M. Either the connection makes some sort of magical difference, or the 2M mass should fall at the same rate as before. Hence the rate is independent of mass. — noAxioms
One can reason that the connection cannot apply a downward force to both objects (violating Newton's laws), but Newton's laws were not available at that time yet. F=ma was unknown, and the theory of impetus and such was still a thing. — noAxioms
Those charts would be correct. Gravity (a) on Saturn is ~1.08g and it orbits at about 9.5 AU. Both g and AU are constants. Saturn does not define a different AU any more than it defines a different g.Ok; I’ll try to remember to use “a” instead :) ...but I did see some charts which identify planets using g in the same way they use distance in terms of earth distance units (AU). — Gampa Dee
Interesting that it quotes the Saturn gravity at 0.92g, less than that of Earth. Their definition of where the surface is must be considerably higher than the more common altitude. It's not like it actually has a surface like 'sea level' or anything, and Earth gravity is not measured where the gas density becomes negligible. Its number of moons is also considerably out of date.
That's one way of looking at it. A light shining at intensity proportional to the mass would decrease in brightness at the square of the distance from the light. But gravity doesn't travel, so you can take the analogy only so far. Gravitational waves travel at c, but gravitational waves are not responsible for the attraction between masses. They're only responsible for carrying the changes to the field, which involves energy expenditure only when the field is changing. For instance, Earth's orbit radiates about 200 watts of gravitational waves into space.Well, for me personally, I ask myself whether there is a meaning behind r^2 besides simply being a distance squared. It would seem logical, for me, to view gravity as being, for example, some sort of energy emanating from the massive body (probably at light`s speed), which would continuously be reducing it`s energy density as it travelled away from the mass source,
Energy is conserved in a closed system, yes. So is momentum. Earth/moon system is not particularly a closed system for energy since so much of it comes in and also leaves, both by EM radiation.I would in fact surely agree to viewing the system as a whole(earth and falling bodies)as being invariant in terms of energy
If the falling body was taken from the ground, that reduces M, and it will thus accelerate less than a similar object falling from space. For a small rock, the difference is immeasurable since the mass of Earth changes more per second than any nitpicking about where you got the rock.“if” the fallen body was taken from the earth (did not come from outer space), for in this case, the falling body was formally on the ground being part of the cause for the g acceleration, and since while the falling body will attract the earth as well, then,for the whole system, the overall acceleration will not change.[/b]
This cannot be right. For two equal stationary masses, it says they will not accelerate towards each other since the sum is zero. This is not the case. Even if you fixed that, the equation there does not express an acceleration, so the 'a=' part in front is blatantly wrong. Nothing accelerates at that rate.But the equation would still remain a = GM/r^2 + Gm / r^2
Ok; I’ll try to remember to use “a” instead :) ...but I did see some charts which identify planets using g in the same way they use distance in terms of earth distance units (AU).
— Gampa Dee
Those charts would be correct. Gravity (a) on Saturn is ~1.08g and it orbits at about 9.5 AU. Both g and AU are constants. Saturn does not define a different AU any more than it defines a different g.
https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/planet_table_ratio.html — noAxioms
Well, for me personally, I ask myself whether there is a meaning behind r^2 besides simply being a distance squared. It would seem logical, for me, to view gravity as being, for example, some sort of energy emanating from the massive body (probably at light`s speed), which would continuously be reducing it`s energy density as it travelled away from the mass source,
That's one way of looking at it. A light shining at intensity proportional to the mass would decrease in brightness at the square of the distance from the light. But gravity doesn't travel, so you can take the analogy only so far. — noAxioms
For example, the moon's orbital distance increases by several cm a year as Earth transfers its angular momentum to it. It also transfers about 3% of its angular energy to it, and radiates the remainder away as heat. So energy is lost in the process of the moon's orbital changes. — noAxioms
If the falling body was taken from the ground, that reduces M, and it will thus accelerate less than a similar object falling from space — noAxioms
For a small rock, the difference is immeasurable since the mass of Earth changes more per second than any nitpicking about where you got the rock. — noAxioms
The moon is like that. It is a big rock that was essentially taken from the ground, not having arrived from space. When they brought back the moon rocks, they were quite surprised to find it was a chunk of Earth and not something else like every other moon out there. But it accelerates at Σ GM/r² where Σ is the summation of the accelerations due to every bit of mass out there, mostly the due to the sun and also Earth (what's left of it after the moon was scooped out), but everything else pulls at it as well. — noAxioms
But the equation would still remain a = GM/r^2 + Gm / r^2
This cannot be right. For two equal stationary masses, it says they will not accelerate towards each other since the sum is zero. This is not the case. — noAxioms
Even if you fixed that, the equation there does not express an acceleration, so the 'a=' part in front is blatantly wrong. Nothing accelerates at that rate. — noAxioms
if a car comes towards you as you are driving your car, the measured velocity relative to both of you is v..., if you knew your velocity relative to the road as being .5v, then you would say that the other car is coming towards you at –.5v....the total v will not be 0... — Gampa Dee
That's not the law, and you wording is trivially falsified. I can drop a rock off a building and simultaneously throw another one downward. The thrown one will fall at a greater rate and arrive first..Galileo’s law ( all bodies fall at the same rate). — Gampa Dee
Well yea. The alternative is some klnd of solipsism where things are gravitationally attracted only to known object, which makes the knower very special.However, this part does seem to show that there are some “unknown” elements as well.
Adding the vectors is what totals zero. The acceleration of neither object was correctly expressed since neither is zero.For two equal stationary masses, it says they will not accelerate towards each other since the sum is zero. This is not the case.
— noAxioms
I guess we need to add vectors...
That's impossible. If a car is moving relative to me at v, then I am moving relative to it at it at -v by definition.if a car comes towards you as you are driving your car, the measured velocity relative to both of you is v...,
Total v? You want to add velocity of me relative to the road to the velocity of them relative to me? The total of that is zero, and yes, that would give the velocity of them relative to the road. Their car is parked. If it isn't, then your figures can't be right. They are moving relative to me at -.5v and the road is also moving relative to me at -.5v, so the two are relatively stationary since they have identical velocity relative to me.if you knew your velocity relative to the road as being .5v, then you would say that the other car is coming towards you at –.5v....the total v will not be 0.
Correct. Nothing is accelerating at a+a (which is zero) nor a-a which is twice something. Doing would violate Newton's laws, F=ma in particular.if a car accelerates towards you as you are accelerating towards it, the total acceleration will “not” be a + a ??
↪Gampa Dee I suggest you read up on inertial and non-inertial frames of reference. I think your misunderstanding stems from not knowing the difference between them and treating both as if there is no difference. — PhilosophyRunner
We may be mixing up speed & velocity. Speed is a scalar but velocity is a vector. — EricH
In your example, both cars are traveling at a speed of 0.5v relative to the road (again no direction). In order to calculate the relative velocity we need to do vector calculations (which can get complicated). In the most general situation the two objects may be moving in arbitrary directions and may or may not ever collide. In your simplified one dimensional example, the velocity of one car is .5v and the velocity of the other car is -5v. But these are vectors, so to calculate the relative velocity between the two you cannot simply add the .5v & -5v and get 0.[/quote]
I agree, this is indeed what I was saying; I did claim the total velocity as being v.
However,I was actually talking of accelerations, and the velocity example was only to make a point. PhilosophyRunner wrote saying that I will need to read up on inertial and non-inertial frames because this is the part that confuses me ...and this is what I'll be doing.
— EricH
You have to factor in the direction and do vector math. The end result will be a relative speed of v - and the vector math will show a collision between the two cars at some point in time depending on the values of v and the starting distance between the two cars. — EricH
.Galileo’s law ( all bodies fall at the same rate).
— Gampa Dee
That's not the law, and you wording is trivially falsified. I can drop a rock off a building and simultaneously throw another one downward. The thrown one will fall at a greater rate and arrive first. — noAxioms
However, this part does seem to show that there are some “unknown” elements as well.
Well yea. The alternative is some klnd of solipsism where things are gravitationally attracted only to known object, which makes the knower very special. — noAxioms
if a car comes towards you as you are driving your car, the measured velocity relative to both of you is v..
.,
That's impossible. If a car is moving relative to me at v, then I am moving relative to it at it at -v by definition. — noAxioms
Total v? You want to add velocity of me relative to the road to the velocity of them relative to me? — noAxioms
if a car accelerates towards you as you are accelerating towards it, the total acceleration will “not” be a + a ??
Correct. Nothing is accelerating at a+a (which is zero) nor a-a which is twice something. Doing would violate Newton's laws, F=ma in particular.
Each car is accelerating at 1a, presumably in opposite directions. — noAxioms
Take once again a pair of equal mass planets X&Y orbiting each other with X at coordinate -1, 0 and Y at 1,0..The both trace a unit circle about the origin at 0,0. X has a coordinate acceleration of 1,0 and Y has a coordinate acceleration of -1,0. Nothing is accelerating at 2 anything. The distance between them isn't changing over time, so adding the acceleration magnitudes does not in any way express the rate of change of their separation. — noAxioms
You seem bent on adding or subtracting velocity or acceleration values, and if the sign is wrong on one of them, you get very incorrect results. So it's important..I don’t know what is wrong with this example apart from my - sign error ...sorry — Gampa Dee
Yet again, acceleration is absolute. There is no 'acceleration between cars' since acceleration isn't a relation.So how should we calculate the acceleration between two cars
The road doesn't matter since acceleration is not a relation. Velocity is, but not acceleration.Car 1 .... a1 = 2 m / s^2 .relative to the road
Car 2.... a2 = - 2 m /s^2 relative to the road
As measured by anybody actually.At time 1sec the first car has a velocity of 2 m / s , the second car will have a velocity of -2m/s
What is the relative “speed” between the two cars? I see 4m/s as measured by car1
Except it isn't acceleration. It is simply a change in coordinate speed of one car relative to the other car. Acceleration is something else, and is not a relation. But yes, relative speed between the cars (in Newtonain mechanics) changes at a rate of 4 m/s², assuming they started at a stop. It doesn't work in all cases if they don't start mutually stationary.It seems the acceleration relative to both cars should then be, in my opinion 4 m/s^2 ...as measured by car 1
I assure you that planets are freefalling. The term means that they're being acted upon by nothing but gravity. Under relativity theory, it means that their worldlines are straight, that is, they trace a geodesic through spacetime. But we're talking Newtonian mechanics here where gravity is a force.No,.not in this case, because the acceleration is due completely to the change in direction...
But we were talking about the case of a freefalling body.
In the case of masses in a mutual circular orbit , each mass has a tangential velocity relative to the other, so as they accelerate towards each other, they miss, maintaining a constant separation.However, I don’t understand why one has the negative acceleration of the other..wouldn’t they crash in this case?
Just use 'speed' instead of velocity if you mean the scalar. But careful, since addition and subtraction of speeds gives ambiguous results. Car A is moving at speed 5 relative to me and car B at 7 relative to me. What is the speed of A relative to B? Answer: not enough information supplied. Could be anywhere from 2 to 12. If velocity was used, there'd be just the one answer.Also, I know that I’m mixed up when we’re dealing with vectors...
But, what we are discussing could be discussed in terms of speeds
Yea, but I find it very deceptive to add those two vectors since it doesn't produce a meaningful result. There's no such thing as 'the total velocity of a system'. If the car was inside the truck trailer and moving at vc relative to the truck, then adding vc to vt would yield the car velocity relative to the road. But that's not what's going on here.http://www.lon-capa.org/~mmp/kap6/cd149.htm
Adding the velocity vectors yields vt + v c = 0 mi/h. — Gampa Dee
As I said, it doesn't yield anything meaningful. I don't like the example text. It obfuscates more than it clarifies anything.So,the addition of vectors in this case is 0...but relative to what?
Yes, there is such a thing as total momentum of the system. That addition is meaningful.The total momentum is therefore = c + t = -111,000 kg m/s
Just what it says. For instance, if, in space (no friction with road), the car were to hit the truck and stick to it in a tangled wreck, the new 5200 kg mass would be moving left at about 21 m/sec to the left, the total momentum / total mass. Momentum is conserved in a closed system. I put them in space to keep it closed since the road would very much be exerting forces if it was there.Again,we have a momentum,of -111 kgm/s....what does that even mean?
So,the addition of vectors in this case is 0...but relative to what?
As I said, it doesn't yield anything meaningful. I don't like the example text. It obfuscates more than it clarifies anything.
It also mixes metric (kg mass) with American units (mi/hr). That's unforgivable in a physics text.
Their momentum vectors seem to have a ratio of about 4, but the text says the ratio is closer to 7. That's poor graphics. — noAxioms
Again,we have a momentum,of -111 kgm/s....what does that even mean?
Just what it says. For instance, if, in space (no friction with road), the car were to hit the truck and stick to it in a tangled wreck, the new 5200 kg mass would be moving left at about 21 m/sec to the left, the total momentum / total mass. Momentum is conserved in a closed system. I put them in space to keep it closed since the road would very much be exerting forces if it was there. — noAxioms
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