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QuoteThe equation τ = P/ω is more applicable in this case.Because it is explicitly derived from τ= F.r.
The equation τ = P/ω is more applicable in this case.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 15/05/2025 14:47:07 A passive measurement system like Cavendish's torsion balance, the needle doesn't have to move back to where it was. What you said is not necessarily true. Some of your previous posts clearly show your confusions." A passive measurement system like Cavendish's torsion balance"We are not talking about that.You can tell from the video."the needle doesn't have to move back to where it was."Nobody said it did; in fact I said it might not." What you said is not necessarily true."What part of what I said (And which I said was necessarily true) is not necessarily true?
A passive measurement system like Cavendish's torsion balance, the needle doesn't have to move back to where it was. What you said is not necessarily true. Some of your previous posts clearly show your confusions.
And the measurement of torque only happens after the system has moved the needle back to where it was (or, if you want, slightly higher).Until then there is no measurement.
How do you derive it?
QuoteHow do you derive it?By definition P =F.ds/dt (for any system) = F.r.ω (for a rotating system) = τ.ω Provided, of course, that you haven't stupidly redefined τ.
BC, he will not answer your question. He tries to divert the discourse when questioned after saying something he cannot back up. He has avoided my question, re the "cancellation" of force.
Quote from: paul cotter on 16/05/2025 09:54:03BC, he will not answer your question. He tries to divert the discourse when questioned after saying something he cannot back up. He has avoided my question, re the "cancellation" of force.I know. And that's why I can't understand why the mods don't ban him.
I don't see him as quite harmless, he is the source of so much error that a third party could easily be misled. He does not debate, he just states his erroneous views and then doubles down on them, refusing to answer pertinent questions or tries to divert the discussion. Infuriating. I suggested previously that all his material be put in one thread and designated "an essay in confusion, too long to read".
You can't measure the force on each point of impeller surface.
my comparison tables
QuoteYou can't measure the force on each point of impeller surface.In fact you can (it's standard practice when designing propellors, wings or turbines) but it's not worth doing once you have designed, built and installed your impeller because you can simply measure the torque applied by the driving axle. Or, of course, the power input to the motor.
Quotemy comparison tables All you have done there is compare apples with oranges, complain that they aren't the same, invent a new fruit with a shiny skin and segmented pulp, and insist that it is a better orange. You then go on to ignore the fact that your new fruit is a useless absurdity.
I also asked Qwen a follow up question about the root cause of the problem. ...
The single deepest source of all the downstream headaches is the SI?s choice to treat angles (and solid angles) as ?dimensionless.? In practice:1. A plane angle θ is defined as the ratio of arc-length to radius θ = s / r both in metres , θ carries no net dimension, so ?radian? is logged away as just ?1.?2. Likewise a solid angle Ω = area / r^2 is dimensionless (steradian = 1).By suppressing the dimension of angle, the SI:- makes torque (N?m) and energy (J = N?m) formally identical in units,- collapses ω [rad/s] and f [cycles/s, i.e. Hz] both into 1/s,- forces us to juggle 2π and π/180 ?by hand? whenever we switch between revolutions, degrees, turns and radians,- breaks the power of dimensional analysis to catch mix-ups involving rotational quantities.In short, the root cause is the **decision** to define radian and steradian as pure numbers rather than as genuine units carrying their own dimension.
*Thinking...*The root cause of the problems with standard units of rotational quantities, particularly the radian, stems from its definition within the International System of Units (SI) as a **dimensionless derived unit**. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[2]](https://www.quora.com/Why-is-a-radian-dimensionless)Here's a breakdown of why this is the core issue:1. **Definition as a Ratio of Lengths:** The radian is defined as the angle subtended at the center of a circle by an arc that is equal in length to the radius. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[2]](https://www.quora.com/Why-is-a-radian-dimensionless) Mathematically, θ (in radians) = arc length (s) / radius (r). Since both arc length and radius are measured in units of length (e.g., meters), these units cancel out (m/m = 1). [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[2]](https://www.quora.com/Why-is-a-radian-dimensionless) This makes the radian, by its very definition in the SI system, a dimensionless quantity ? a pure number. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[2]](https://www.quora.com/Why-is-a-radian-dimensionless)2. **"Dimensionless" Implies No Fundamental Unit:** Because it's dimensionless, the radian is not considered a base unit in the SI system, unlike meters for length, kilograms for mass, or seconds for time. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[3]](https://www.quora.com/Why-are-the-radian-and-steradian-not-considered-SI-base-units) It's treated as a derived unit equal to 1. [[4]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radian) This means that, from a dimensional analysis perspective, angles don't have their own fundamental "angle" dimension. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)3. **Consequences of Dimensionlessness:** * **"Disappearing" Units:** In many physics equations involving rotational quantities, the "radian" unit seems to appear or disappear, which can be confusing and lead to errors if not handled carefully. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[5]](https://www.reddit.com/r/PhysicsStudents/comments/a8r44d/why_do_radians_just_disappear_during_solving_for/) For example, in `tangential velocity (v) = angular velocity (ω) * radius (r)`, if `ω` is in rad/s and `r` is in meters, `v` comes out in m/s. The "rad" effectively vanishes. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless) * **Ambiguity with Other Quantities:** * **Torque vs. Energy:** Torque (force x distance, N?m) and energy (e.g., work done, Joules, which is also N?m) end up having the same fundamental SI dimensions (M L? T⁻?). While the SI recommends using N?m for torque and J for energy to distinguish them, the underlying dimensional similarity can be problematic. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless) Some argue torque should be J/rad to explicitly include the angular nature. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless) * **Frequency vs. Angular Frequency:** Frequency (Hertz, Hz, which is s⁻?) and angular frequency (radians per second, rad/s) both reduce to the dimension of s⁻? in the SI system. This can lead to confusion and potential errors involving factors of 2π. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless) * **Mathematical Functions:** Trigonometric functions (sin, cos, tan) and series expansions (like Taylor series for these functions) are mathematically cleaner when angles are expressed in radians, precisely because the radian is treated as a pure number. [[6]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2605865/why-are-radians-dimensionless)[[7]](https://www.themathdoctors.org/radians-why-and-when-they-are-better/) If the radian had a dimension, these formulas would require a conversion factor to make the arguments of the functions dimensionless. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[6]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2605865/why-are-radians-dimensionless)4. **Convention vs. Physical Reality:** While the dimensionless nature of the radian is a convention based on its definition, some argue that "angle" is a distinct physical quantity that should have its own dimension. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)[[6]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2605865/why-are-radians-dimensionless) They believe that treating it as dimensionless is a source of inconsistency when applying units to real-world physical phenomena. [[1]](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)In essence, the decision to define the radian as a ratio of two lengths, making it inherently dimensionless in the SI system, is the fundamental reason for the subsequent issues of ambiguity, disappearing units in equations, and the debate over whether angle should be considered a fundamental dimension. While this definition offers mathematical conveniences in some areas (like calculus), it creates conceptual and practical challenges in others, particularly in dimensional analysis and the clear representation of physical quantities involving rotation.---Learn more:1. [unit of measure - Why radian is dimensionless? - Mathematics Stack Exchange](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionless)2. [Why is a radian dimensionless? - Quora](https://www.quora.com/Why-is-a-radian-dimensionless)3. [Why are the radian and steradian not considered SI base units? - Quora](https://www.quora.com/Why-are-the-radian-and-steradian-not-considered-SI-base-units)4. [Radian - Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radian)5. [Why do radians just "disappear" during solving for units in an equation? - Reddit](https://www.reddit.com/r/PhysicsStudents/comments/a8r44d/why_do_radians_just_disappear_during_solving_for/)6. [Why are radians dimensionless? \[duplicate\] - Math Stack Exchange](https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2605865/why-are-radians-dimensionless)7. [Radians: Why, and When, They Are Better - The Math Doctors](https://www.themathdoctors.org/radians-why-and-when-they-are-better/)
Quote from: Bored chemist on 16/05/2025 11:44:25Quote from: paul cotter on 16/05/2025 09:54:03BC, he will not answer your question. He tries to divert the discourse when questioned after saying something he cannot back up. He has avoided my question, re the "cancellation" of force.I know. And that's why I can't understand why the mods don't ban him.Perhaps because they already understand my point. You are wondering why because you haven't yet.
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/803955/why-radian-is-dimensionlessAngles are dimensionless quantities (e.g. m/m for rad and m?/m? for sr). They have no base units in SI, meaning angles have no fundamental existence (contrary to a length or a time), they are derived from something else. This actually creates problems and since a long time proposals have been made to give angle a true dimension. Such change has many implications on other quantities.The status of angle units has never been clear for the BIPM, the bureau in charge of the SI system, but as making angle units true base units creates more problems than it solves, there is a status quo.An angle is a ratio, but there are different ratiosIf you look at the definition of (plane) angle measurement units, they are all the ratio of a length to a length, so have dimension of m/m = 1, i.e. they are dimensionless.1 rad: The angle subtended by an arc of a circle that has the same length as the circle's radius. Ratio 1/1.1 turn: The angle subtended by the circumference of a circle at its center. Ratio 2π/1.1?: 1 turn / 360. Ratio 2π/360.1 gon (grad, gradient): 1 turn / 400. Ratio 2π/400.The angle unit indicates which ratio is usedNote angle comes from latin angulus, apex/corner, and is the corner made by the intersection of two lines/planes. Angle in science is actually a shortcut for angle measure.And as a matter of fact drawing an angle is easy, but measuring an angle requires some specific construction, e.g. a circle (the ratio of the arc to the radius is the measure), a square (the angle made by the diagonals is 1/4 of a turn), etc. All computations ultimately lead to the ratio of a length to a length. So an angle measure, regardless of the unit used, has no dimension.However the unit indicates which ratio was used, an angle of n?arc/radius is not an angle of n?1/360. So we need to explain which reference was used, this is the definition of a unit.The assumption is when we use radians, we can omit the unit, and the implicit radian unit in math is due to the simplification it allows, e.g. in Euler's formula linking angles, Euler number and complex numbers.Still angle units, plane (rad = 1m/m) and solid (sr = 1m?/m?), are of a special kind. From a SI standpoint, they have been supplementary units, separate from base units and derived units. This special class of units was removed in 1995:QuoteThe Comit? International des Poids et Mesures, in 1980, having observed that the ambiguous status of the supplementary units compromises the internal coherence of the SI, has in its Recommendation 1 (CI-1980) interpreted the supplementary units, in the SI, as dimensionless derived units.Dimensionless radian is also a problemAngle units are now derived units. However this classification and the fact angles are considered dimensionless is strongly challenged as it creates inconsistencies when applied to the real world.E.g. torque is a force resulting from rotation. It is currently measured in N m, which is a Joule and doesn't reflect an angular quantity. It would be more meaningful to use J rad−1, but this requires radian to be a base unit with a dimension, this would be the 8th base unit of the SI.
The Comit? International des Poids et Mesures, in 1980, having observed that the ambiguous status of the supplementary units compromises the internal coherence of the SI, has in its Recommendation 1 (CI-1980) interpreted the supplementary units, in the SI, as dimensionless derived units.
torque is a force resulting from rotation
Which table are you referring to?