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- What is the difference between kinematics and dynamics?
A quick Google search reveals "dynamic and kinematic viscosity," "kinematic and dynamic performance," "fully dynamic and kinematic voronoi diagrams," "kinematic and reduced-dynamic precise orbit determination," and many other occurrences of this distinction What is the real distinction between kinematics and dynamics?
- kinematics - How to get distance when acceleration is not constant . . .
Start asking to get answers Find the answer to your question by asking Ask question kinematics acceleration integration calculus
- About the complex nature of the wave function?
On Decoupling Probability from Kinematics in Quantum Mechanics Zitterbewegung Modeling Space-Time Structure of Weak and Electromagnetic Interactions to keep more references together: Geometric Algebra and its Application to Mathematical Physics (Chris Thesis) (what lead me to this amazing path was a paper by Joy Christian ' Disproof of Bell
- Difference b w Kinetics Kinematics w concrete example
seems to me like "kinematics" analyzes the motion (trajectories etc ), without worrying what is causing the motion While "kinetics" or as most would say "dynamics" does care about what causes motion (namely torques, forces)
- What are the equations for motion with constant jerk?
Every one knows the three famous equations for motions with constant acceleration But what if the motion were having a jerk? How should then be the equations for motions? How can I find them?
- kinematics - Does the acceleration due of gravity taken positive or . . .
If we throw something upwards with some initial velocity (of course), then it's the same whether the acceleration upward is considered positive or negative, right? But by convention, the upward dir
- kinematics - Why do I get a negative time? - Physics Stack Exchange
Use kinematics to calculate the acceleration, which is $-2\ \mathrm {\frac {m} {s^2}}$ assuming the sprinter is running to the right, I defined any motion opposite to that is negative
- kinematics - In Projectile Motion, will the initial velocity ALWAYS . . .
This questions assumes that air resistance is negligible I know that in some cases the initial and final velocity do equal each other However, I am confused as to when that applies, in what cas
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