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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 - Are position, velocity, and acceleration total or partial . . .
In general, when analyzing kinematics, how do we decide whether to treat velocity, acceleration, position, or time as dependent or independent variables? Is time always the independent variable, or can it sometimes be treated as dependent? I'm struggling with the concepts of explicit and implicit dependence of variables
- kinematics - Stopping Distance (frictionless) - Physics Stack Exchange
Assuming I have a body travelling in space at a rate of $1000~\\text{m s}$ Let's also assume my maximum deceleration speed is $10~\\text{m s}^2$ How can I calculate the minimum stopping distance of
- Newest kinematics Questions - Physics Stack Exchange
The description of the movement of bodies by their position, velocity, acceleration (and possibly higher time derivatives, such as, jerk) without concern for the underlying dynamics forces causes
- Difference b w Kinetics Kinematics w concrete example
Some websites out there say (ex ) explain that force is only considered in kinematics Does this mean for example Newton-Euler method is in kinetics and Lagrangian is in kinematics? I also prefer concrete examples in both category
- kinematics - What does the magnitude of the acceleration mean . . .
Your question is kind of vague but I will try to respond Acceleration is defined as the time rate of change of velocity Since velocity has both magnitude and direction, so does acceleration In other words, acceleration is a vector The length of the vector is its magnitude Its direction is the direction of the vector So the magnitude of acceleration is the magnitude of the acceleration
- kinematics - Radius of curvature - Physics Stack Exchange
I have come across a question that asked me to find the radius of curvature of a projectile As far as I know, the path of a projectile is a parabola and I have found mention of the radius of curv
- Recommendations for good Newtonian mechanics and kinematics books
What are some good books for learning the concepts of Kinematics, Newton laws, 2D Motion of Object etc ?
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