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#241
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In article .com, george
says... Isn't a Bernouli what an Arab wears? under his theorum :-) Is that near his axiom? Sorry I couldn't help myself. Chuck S |
#242
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Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph.
What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Suppose we have a 1500 lb rocketship hovering over the moon on its rocket exhaust. What are its horizontal and vertical componnts of momentum? Jose -- Money: what you need when you run out of brains. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#243
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![]() Jose wrote: Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph. What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Suppose we have a 1500 lb rocketship hovering over the moon on its rocket exhaust. What are its horizontal and vertical componnts of momentum? I asked first. -- FF |
#244
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On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 08:00:45 -0800, fredfighter wrote:
Jose wrote: Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph. What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Zero at equalibrium. Suppose we have a 1500 lb rocketship hovering over the moon on its rocket exhaust. What are its horizontal and vertical componnts of momentum? Again, zero. I asked first. Same answer, different criteria. Net energy for a given mass will be the same whether the craft is flying, rocketing, or in orbit. F=MA But, only in the instance of 'flying' does Bernuolli apply. |
#245
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In article ,
"00:00:00Hg" wrote: On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 08:00:45 -0800, fredfighter wrote: Jose wrote: Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph. What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Zero at equalibrium. Incorrect. It has considerable horizontal momentum and no vertical momentum. Suppose we have a 1500 lb rocketship hovering over the moon on its rocket exhaust. What are its horizontal and vertical componnts of momentum? Again, zero. Correct, but how can you possibly get zero for this answer and think that an aircraft moving horizontally at 120 mph has no horizontal momentum... snip -- Alan Baker Vancouver, British Columbia "If you raise the ceiling 4 feet, move the fireplace from that wall to that wall, you'll still only get the full stereophonic effect if you sit in the bottom of that cupboard." |
#246
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On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 17:56:39 +0000, Alan Baker wrote:
Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph. What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Zero at equalibrium. Incorrect. It has considerable horizontal momentum and no vertical momentum. I thought the focus was forces. The 'aircraft' with respect to the media, air. If the ground is at play with respect to horizontal 'componet' is it in the form of 'gravity' (a force) or geologial energy of some sort expressed as the force of location? This is hightly interesting. Never thought of it before. |
#247
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00:00:00Hg wrote:
On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 17:56:39 +0000, Alan Baker wrote: Suppose we have a 1500 lb airplane in level flight at 120 mph. What are its horizontal and vertical components of momentum? Zero at equalibrium. Incorrect. It has considerable horizontal momentum and no vertical momentum. Whereas for the hovering spacecraft both components are zero. I thought the focus was forces. It should be. The hovering spacecraft has zero horizontal and vertical momentum. It has weight, directed downwards. The engine accelerates mass downward producing an upward force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the weight of the spacecraft. This imparts an acceleration to the spacecraft equal in magnitude and opposite in direction from the local acceleration due to gravity. Now of course weight is a convenient fiction. There is really no such thing as gravitational force, what we model as a force acting at a distance is in reality the distortion of spacetime in the presence of mass. Perhaps other forces are similarly ficticious. But how sure can we be that mass and velocity are any less ficticious than force? -- FF |
#248
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On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 10:55:59 -0800, fredfighter wrote:
Now of course weight is a convenient fiction. Can I allocate excess fat that same definition? There is really no such thing as gravitational force, what we model as a force acting at a distance is in reality the distortion of spacetime in the presence of mass. Perhaps other forces are similarly ficticious. I hope not the Air Force. So you want to bring general and special relativity into the frey `eh? Newton ain't good enough for you, huh? Ok. Gimme your Lorentz transformations for -Mach 1 to +Mach 1 at the transition point. I wanna see how time and gravity are related to mass transactions. The speed of sound must be a nodal harmonic of the speed of light. I wanna see it too. Gimme gimme... But how sure can we be that mass and velocity are any less ficticious than force? Gravity seems to work to it's own advantage so it's the ultimate taxing authority in the universe. That really sucks. |
#249
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On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 11:57:05 -0800, george wrote:
Gravity seems to work to it's own advantage so it's the ultimate taxing authority in the universe. That really sucks. Air resistance is fricticious I thought resistance was useless. At least for Dent and Ford. |
#250
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On Fri, 03 Mar 2006 01:27:46 +0000, David CL Francis wrote:
Above Mach one the air does not detect the approaching aircraft! :-) If it did, what would happen? |
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