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Do you understand the concepts of rate of change?
What about angular momentum?
As the name suggests, the modern concept of torque was not recognized by ancient people.
You are confused between torque, which every engineer has recognised since the invention of the wheel, and your bizarre, ludicrous and utterly useless redefinition of the word, the implications of which you plainly refuse to understand.
https://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/301/lectures/node155.htmlQuote(Recall, from Sect. 9, that torque is the rate of change of angular momentum.)
(Recall, from Sect. 9, that torque is the rate of change of angular momentum.)
My Neolithic predecessor Ug built a windlass to raise a bucket of water from a well. Being a physicist rather than an engineer, he used a frictionless pivot and a weightless rope. The radius of the spindle was r meters and the weight of the full bucket was F newtons. So the torque needed to raise the bucket was Fr newton meters, whether he rotated the spindle once, a hundred times, or not at all. Then Hamdani's (great)n grandfather came along and told him that torque is an inverse function of angular displacement so the torque required to lift the bucket increased as it was rising, but magically disappeared if it stopped moving, so he didn't need a brake to stop the bucket falling back down the well. What is most surprising about this story is that Hamdani's line of evolution has not been eliminated by Darwinian selection. It is remarkable that any family has survived until the 21st century without encountering rotating machinery, or at least the need to prevent it from rotating. So there is still a place for Aristotelian mechanics.
Quote from: alancalverd on 30/03/2025 12:55:10I'm quite happy dealing with people who don't know much physics, but not with someone who refuses to learn.Between these two tables, which one is more consistent? Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/03/2025 22:13:00You don't seem to be aware of the inconsistency in current standard units of rotational quantities, as shown clearly in this table. Compare them with the new proposed standard units, which are consistent with the relating equations.
I'm quite happy dealing with people who don't know much physics, but not with someone who refuses to learn.
You don't seem to be aware of the inconsistency in current standard units of rotational quantities, as shown clearly in this table. Compare them with the new proposed standard units, which are consistent with the relating equations.
Quotehttps://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/301/lectures/node155.htmlQuote(Recall, from Sect. 9, that torque is the rate of change of angular momentum.)Let this be a warning to anyone contemplating studying physics or engineering at UT. No wonder US manufacturing industry has gone down the toilet, and the doors fall off Boeing aircraft.
Using your definition of torque, please calculate the torque required to rotate Ug's windlass (reply #702) through one, five and ten rotations.Using your definition of torque, please calculate the force required on the brake pads of a car to hold it stationary on a slope.Both calculations are perfectly straightforward and absolutely consistent if you use the "current standard units". The implications of your proposed definitions are frankly ridiculous.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 30/03/2025 13:55:40Quote from: alancalverd on 30/03/2025 12:55:10I'm quite happy dealing with people who don't know much physics, but not with someone who refuses to learn.Between these two tables, which one is more consistent? Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/03/2025 22:13:00You don't seem to be aware of the inconsistency in current standard units of rotational quantities, as shown clearly in this table. Compare them with the new proposed standard units, which are consistent with the relating equations.If you still wonder why some people have proposed changes to current standard units in rotational quantities, read the tables above thoroughly, and understand what they mean and imply.
You still haven't answered the questions, because you can't.If τ= Fr, then τ is constant however many turns Ug makes of the windlass, which is obvious and demonstrable, from the horse-powered well (there was one in my back garden) to the weight-driven cuckoo clock.If you make τ = Fr/θ, then τ decreases from infinity towards zero as the bucket rises or the clock hands move, which is nonsense.If you define τ as Iα, then assemble a nut and bolt with a tightening specification of τmax, you can flick the nut with your finger and get a very high immediate value of α, but whilst you might pass a University of Texas exam with that definition, it won't hold the door onto an airplane built in Seattle or St Louis, as recently demonstrated.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 20/04/2025 00:20:35Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 30/03/2025 13:55:40Quote from: alancalverd on 30/03/2025 12:55:10I'm quite happy dealing with people who don't know much physics, but not with someone who refuses to learn.Between these two tables, which one is more consistent? Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 26/03/2025 22:13:00You don't seem to be aware of the inconsistency in current standard units of rotational quantities, as shown clearly in this table. Compare them with the new proposed standard units, which are consistent with the relating equations.If you still wonder why some people have proposed changes to current standard units in rotational quantities, read the tables above thoroughly, and understand what they mean and imply.Before we debate about the difference, let's discuss about their similarities first. The proposed new standard units are the same as current standard units for angle, angular velocity, and angular acceleration. Also for work and power. Units for kinetic energy and potential energy are also still the same.
If τ doesn't equal Iα, how do you relate torque to angular acceleration?
You are confused because my formula is not F r/θ.
Thus the standard unit for rotational radius should be meter per radian.
What's the unit of Torque?I have been away over Easter; has it changed?
QuoteIf τ doesn't equal Iα, how do you relate torque to angular acceleration?Cart before horse! If you apply a torque τ to a freely rotating body I then it will accelerate at α = τ/I. But if you apply the same torque to a body that is not free to rotate, it won't. Therefore Iα is a potential effect of torque, not a definition of it.I covered this point several posts ago. QuoteYou are confused because my formula is not F r/θ. Oh yes it is:QuoteThus the standard unit for rotational radius should be meter per radian.
Quote from: paul cotter on 02/04/2025 17:44:02Remove all "rads" and the table becomes consistent. What's your unit for rotational angle, angular velocity, and angular acceleration?
Remove all "rads" and the table becomes consistent.