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Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 02/08/2025 18:22:47In more general cases where the trajectory is not necessarily circular, the rotational radius isn't necessarily constant. In other words, there's a non-zero radial displacement. In these cases, current standard is no longer adequate to describe the rotational system. I'm working on the problem with elliptical trajectory using my proposed standard. Qwen can solve it in a few prompts, even in older version. Newer AI models will be able too, IMO. The first case of elliptical trajectory is when the tangential speed is constant. Consequentially, its kinetic energy is constant. The acceleration must be purely orthogonal. But the angular speed must vary, inversely proportional to the rotational radius at the moment. This video could help you visualize what I described above. Imagine the track is elliptical instead of circular.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWojYBhvfjMSuperconductor at -196?C, Quantum Levitation | Magnetic GamesQuoteWith the use of liquid nitrogen, the YBCO compound can be cooled until it becomes a superconductor, and a superconductor placed in a magnetic field has amazing behaviors. Please activate the subtitles to get more info on the experiment.The next case is when the angular speed is constant. This can be done by modifying the previous setup with a smooth pipe where the puck can slide inside without friction, and a motor/generator unit equipped with battery to control the rotation of the pipe at a constant angular speed. When accelerating, potential energy from battery flow to the motor, and converted to kinetic energy. When decelerating, kinetic energy from the puck is converted by the generator and stored back to the battery as potential energy.
In more general cases where the trajectory is not necessarily circular, the rotational radius isn't necessarily constant. In other words, there's a non-zero radial displacement. In these cases, current standard is no longer adequate to describe the rotational system. I'm working on the problem with elliptical trajectory using my proposed standard. Qwen can solve it in a few prompts, even in older version. Newer AI models will be able too, IMO. The first case of elliptical trajectory is when the tangential speed is constant. Consequentially, its kinetic energy is constant. The acceleration must be purely orthogonal. But the angular speed must vary, inversely proportional to the rotational radius at the moment.
With the use of liquid nitrogen, the YBCO compound can be cooled until it becomes a superconductor, and a superconductor placed in a magnetic field has amazing behaviors. Please activate the subtitles to get more info on the experiment.
The formula E = τ. θ implies that standard unit for torque is Joule per radian.
QuoteThe formula E = τ. θ implies that standard unit for torque is Joule per radian. which is why nobody uses it. In the real world ΔE = τ.r.θ
The relationship between torque and energy is fundamentally about work done by torque. Work done by a torque is the product of the torque and the angular displacement it causes. The formula for work done by torque is: W = τθ, where τ is the torque and θ is the angular displacement in radians. Google it.
Can you check with unit analysis?
The relationship between torque and energy is fundamentally about work done by torque.
QuoteCan you check with unit analysis? I presume you mean dimensional analysis. No need. rθ is the distance the weight has risen or fallen. ΔEnergy = weight x distance. QuoteThe relationship between torque and energy is fundamentally about work done by torque. Exactly. But you can still have a static torque that does no work, just as you can have a static weight whose potential energy doesn't change. So it's a bad idea to define torque as a product of energy, or indeed anything to do with movement.
I do mean unit.
Degree and radian are dimensionless as they refer to a certain fraction of a circle, ie they are a ratio of a part of a circle to the whole of the circle. Nowhere else do we ascribe dimensions to a ratio.
The mole (symbol mol) is a unit of measurement, the base unit in the International System of Units (SI) for amount of substance, an SI base quantity proportional to the number of elementary entities of a substance. One mole is an aggregate of exactly 6.02214076?1023 elementary entities (approximately 602 sextillion or 602 billion times a trillion), which can be atoms, molecules, ions, ion pairs, or other particles. The number of particles in a mole is the Avogadro number (symbol N0) and the numerical value of the Avogadro constant (symbol NA) expressed in mol−1.[1] The relationship between the mole, Avogadro number, and Avogadro constant can be expressed in the following equation:[1]\https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(unit)#
QuoteI do mean unit. OK. The unit of energy is the joule and the unit of torque is the newton,meter. They are different entities so they have different units.
"I do mean unit. Meter and mile have the same dimension. So do degree and radian. But if you involve more than one unit, you need to include a conversion" This quote is what I was answering- Hamdani, you say you mean unit but you constantly hop from unit to dimension.
Currently, they are distinguished only by convention.
QuoteCurrently, they are distinguished only by convention. Rubbish. They are distinguished by name (energy, torque) and unit (joule, newton-meter). 1 joule of energy will heat a gram of water by about 0.25 K. 1 nm of torque will not. "Convention" distinguishes between two things with the same name, like mole (carnivorous quadruped) and mole (6.022 x 1023).Ratios of the same entity are obviously dimensionless. The aspect ratio of a television screen is a length divided by a length, L/L = 16/9 usually. Hence the ratio of circumference to radius of a circle is also dimensionless. We use the term grad, rad or deg to indicate whether the denominator is 400, 2π, or 360.
But the formula implies that 1 Joule equals 1 Newton meter. In current standard, they are distinguished by convention.
QuoteBut the formula implies that 1 Joule equals 1 Newton meter. In current standard, they are distinguished by convention.NO! The difference is between a scalar product (energy = force x distance moved in the line of action of the force) and a vector product (torque = force x distance perpendicular to the line of action of the force.) Hence energy is a scalar and torque is a vector. Nothing to do with "convention" beyond the sensible fact that different quantities have different names and different units, so the rest of us don't get confused. You will recall that "conservative forces do no work"; in other words, no work is done moving a mass at constant speed along a frictionless horizontal plane, because the reaction force is perpendicular to the direction of movement. Orthogonality is very important in maths and physics.
The convention is to call energy "energy" and measure it in joules, and to call torque "torque", and measure it in newton-meters.What more could you possibly want? The leg dimension of a cow is 4. The leg dimension of a cat is 4. One is a herbivore, one is a carnivore. We distinguish them with the conventional names "cow" and "cat", which is important because they both live on farms, but do different jobs. But to an octopus, or, apparently, a physics teacher, they are indistinguishable because they are both quadrupeds.
The equation states that torque equals work divided by angular distance of rotation.