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Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/03/2025 09:09:54List of authors in a creation of international standards.Is there such a list available?
List of authors in a creation of international standards.
Is the new standard document anonymous? Or worse, undocumented?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/03/2025 09:10:56Why the radian doesn't show up in the unit of power?Because it is irrelevant. A watt is a watt.
Why the radian doesn't show up in the unit of power?
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/03/2025 09:08:02Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/03/2025 23:35:34Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 03/03/2025 12:57:15To change a standard, saying that everyone is wrong isn't enough. It needs to be supported by strong evidence and argumentation to demonstrate that the new standard is more useful than the old one.And you have not got close to doing that.A thousand miles journey starts with a single step.Only if it's in the right direction.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/03/2025 23:35:34Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 03/03/2025 12:57:15To change a standard, saying that everyone is wrong isn't enough. It needs to be supported by strong evidence and argumentation to demonstrate that the new standard is more useful than the old one.And you have not got close to doing that.A thousand miles journey starts with a single step.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 03/03/2025 12:57:15To change a standard, saying that everyone is wrong isn't enough. It needs to be supported by strong evidence and argumentation to demonstrate that the new standard is more useful than the old one.And you have not got close to doing that.
To change a standard, saying that everyone is wrong isn't enough. It needs to be supported by strong evidence and argumentation to demonstrate that the new standard is more useful than the old one.
The proposed new standards are directed to more consistent units according to unit analysis.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/03/2025 21:46:01The proposed new standards are directed to more consistent units according to unit analysis.If you mean dimensional analysis, it doesn't help at all.
I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the notion of "rotational analogs of linear quantities".
as long as there is a correct feedback mechanism..
Pick an ISO standard and try to find out who wrote it.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 04/03/2025 21:46:01 as long as there is a correct feedback mechanism..We give you the feedback.It doesn't seem to help.Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/03/2025 18:36:30Pick an ISO standard and try to find out who wrote it.
What should be changed in my proposed new standard units for rotational quantities?
Why do you think the changes are necessary?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/03/2025 18:36:30Pick an ISO standard and try to find out who wrote it.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 23/02/2025 15:11:46Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 23/02/2025 13:06:31Quote from: paul cotter on 23/02/2025 12:05:19You, Hamdani, have fallen into delusions of grandeur, thinking that you are smarter than the current body of scientific discipline.You have fallen into a logical fallacy called argument from authority. No.There's nothing wrong with recognising the authority of authorities.Recognizing doesn't mean always agree blindly without question. It has some value for making decisions, especially if we don't have the first hand information ourselves.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 23/02/2025 13:06:31Quote from: paul cotter on 23/02/2025 12:05:19You, Hamdani, have fallen into delusions of grandeur, thinking that you are smarter than the current body of scientific discipline.You have fallen into a logical fallacy called argument from authority. No.There's nothing wrong with recognising the authority of authorities.
Quote from: paul cotter on 23/02/2025 12:05:19You, Hamdani, have fallen into delusions of grandeur, thinking that you are smarter than the current body of scientific discipline.You have fallen into a logical fallacy called argument from authority.
You, Hamdani, have fallen into delusions of grandeur, thinking that you are smarter than the current body of scientific discipline.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 06/03/2025 22:07:14What should be changed in my proposed new standard units for rotational quantities?It should be deleted.Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 06/03/2025 22:07:14Why do you think the changes are necessary?Because the proposals serve no purpose.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angle#Dimensional_analysisPlane angle may be defined as θ = s/r, where θ is the magnitude in radians of the subtended angle, s is circular arc length, and r is radius. One radian corresponds to the angle for which s = r, hence 1 radian = 1 m/m = 1.[9] However, rad is only to be used to express angles, not to express ratios of lengths in general.[7] A similar calculation using the area of a circular sector θ = 2A/r2 gives 1 radian as 1 m2/m2 = 1.[10] The key fact is that the radian is a dimensionless unit equal to 1. In SI 2019, the SI radian is defined accordingly as 1 rad = 1.[11] It is a long-established practice in mathematics and across all areas of science to make use of rad = 1.[4][12]Giacomo Prando writes "the current state of affairs leads inevitably to ghostly appearances and disappearances of the radian in the dimensional analysis of physical equations".[13] For example, an object hanging by a string from a pulley will rise or drop by y = rθ centimetres, where r is the magnitude of the radius of the pulley in centimetres and θ is the magnitude of the angle through which the pulley turns in radians. When multiplying r by θ, the unit radian does not appear in the product, nor does the unit centimetre?because both factors are magnitudes (numbers). Similarly in the formula for the angular velocity of a rolling wheel, ω = v/r, radians appear in the units of ω but not on the right hand side.[14] Anthony French calls this phenomenon "a perennial problem in the teaching of mechanics".[15] Oberhofer says that the typical advice of ignoring radians during dimensional analysis and adding or removing radians in units according to convention and contextual knowledge is "pedagogically unsatisfying".[16]In 1993 the American Association of Physics Teachers Metric Committee specified that the radian should explicitly appear in quantities only when different numerical values would be obtained when other angle measures were used, such as in the quantities of angle measure (rad), angular speed (rad/s), angular acceleration (rad/s2), and torsional stiffness (N⋅m/rad), and not in the quantities of torque (N⋅m) and angular momentum (kg⋅m2/s).[17]At least a dozen scientists between 1936 and 2022 have made proposals to treat the radian as a base unit of measurement for a base quantity (and dimension) of "plane angle".[18][19][20] Quincey's review of proposals outlines two classes of proposal. The first option changes the unit of a radius to meters per radian, but this is incompatible with dimensional analysis for the area of a circle, πr2. The other option is to introduce a dimensional constant. According to Quincey this approach is "logically rigorous" compared to SI, but requires "the modification of many familiar mathematical and physical equations".[21] A dimensional constant for angle is "rather strange" and the difficulty of modifying equations to add the dimensional constant is likely to preclude widespread use.[20]
No. It's unit analysis. If you use miles instead of kilometer, you must include the conversion factor.
In 1993 the American Association of Physics Teachers Metric Committee specified that the radian should explicitly appear in quantities only when different numerical values would be obtained when other angle measures were used,
And whatever units you use, if they are consistent (all SI, or all FPS.....) between torque and moment of inertia, the result of applying a constant torque to a freely rotating body is always rad/sec2. That's all you need to teach and learn.