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Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 06/03/2025 21:44:03Quote from: alancalverd on 06/03/2025 16:10:33I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the notion of "rotational analogs of linear quantities".I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the deceptively simple formula for torque, without considering that it's correlated to other rotational quantities. As I mentioned in my video, torque is only one third of rotational quantities with problematic standard units. The other two are angular momentum and rotational inertia. These three proposed units for new standard of rotational quantities are simply a logical consequences from changing the standard unit of rotational radius to meter per radian.
Quote from: alancalverd on 06/03/2025 16:10:33I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the notion of "rotational analogs of linear quantities".I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the deceptively simple formula for torque, without considering that it's correlated to other rotational quantities. As I mentioned in my video, torque is only one third of rotational quantities with problematic standard units. The other two are angular momentum and rotational inertia.
I think you (and maybe others) have been misled by the notion of "rotational analogs of linear quantities".
Quote from: alancalverd on 22/03/2025 09:14:31Once again, you have failed to answer the simplest of questions by the application of your proposed new quantity.This one? Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 21/03/2025 12:38:15What is the time derivative of angular momentum?What is R when nothing is rotating?BTW, 0! = 1, by definition.
Once again, you have failed to answer the simplest of questions by the application of your proposed new quantity.
What is the time derivative of angular momentum?What is R when nothing is rotating?BTW, 0! = 1, by definition.
If you want the moment of inertia to have the dimensions ML2θ-2, what does this imply when θ = 0? According to your system an object at rest cannot be rotated because it would have infinite rotational inertia. This means that we don't need parking brakes at all!
As for "acknowledging the difference between rotational and geometric radius" this is taught very effectively to people who play ball-and-stick games like cricket, baseball, or tennis, and also to the mechanics who balance your wheels in a tyre shop. What's the problem?
Quote from: paul cotter on 11/03/2025 21:19:56Confusion, ad infinitum!I'm sorry that I couldn't describe the problem simple enough for you to understand it. Let me try again.Current standard units create inconsistencies when compared to the results from equations relating one rotational quantities to the others.Compare them with the new proposed standard units, which are consistent with the relating equations.
Confusion, ad infinitum!
I can't get out of the car, run around it, and shove wedges under the tyres, without killing myself or crashing into the next car, if the slope exceeds one or two degrees. Perhaps you have footmen waiting on every hill just in case you want to park there, but that's not how things work on my planet. You bring the car to a standstill with the footbrake (I won't ask you to do the calculation) then apply the parking brake. The rotational radius of a centrally pivoted disc is, by symmetry, the same as its geometric radius. i.e. not zero.So please, using your redefinition of torque, calculate the force between the brake pads and the disc. You can't. But the guys who designed my car could, using everyone else's definition of torque.
Wikipedia: The radius of gyration or gyradius of a body about the axis of rotation is defined as the radial distance to a point which would have a moment of inertia the same as the body's actual distribution of mass, if the total mass of the body were concentrated there. The radius of gyration has dimensions of distance [L] or [M0LT0] and the SI unit is the metre (m).This is elementary school physics, and nobody but yourself finds it confusing or insufficient.
I did read the AAPT article and it is frankly rubbish. The radian has never been a problem in my learning, work, teaching or research, as long as it is properly taught. In fact the radian is a solution, not a problem, and neatly links physics and mathematics in a way that other measures of angle cannot.
As I have pointed out throughout this debate, there is no problem in defining torque as force x distance,
It means you've never been assigned with tasks that required consistency in units of rotational quantities.