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More on acceleration
- Subject: More on acceleration
- Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2006 13:55:08 -0400
Walter
Tom...
I understand very well. My choice of the words, "accelerated
acceleration" was designed to emphasize the concept of increasing acceleration
as what I have found to be a good teaching tool. I know full well that it
is NOT in the lexicon of an engineer.
If I drop a lead ball from the 28th floor of a building, it will fall at an
accelerated rate of 16' per second / per second. That is a fixed RATE of
acceleration. (written in stone).
Now, if I attatch a rocket to that ball and aim it down toward the ground,
this ball accelerates at an increasing rate. THAT IS ACCELERATED
ACCELERATION as I see it. To use different words to avoid offending
engineers, we can also say that this is increasing acceleration.
Velocity has to be considered as speed in a given direction....unless we
get into the celestial physics of an ever expanding universe in which instance
it is velocity in an infinite number of directions.
Velocity, as I see it, is not necessarily in a straight line or linear
direction, but can be in a curved or irregular direction.
Tom, you said "Acceleration of the rod tip is a constantly increasing change of speed in a given direction on a
straight line plane. Would this work?"...... OK with me.....except that
we'd have a collision if our rod tip moved strictly in a straight plane.
To avoid that, our best casters move the rod tip in a very slightly convex
path.
This stuff makes us all THINK..........THANKS
!
Gordy
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Gordy,
I looked for a definition of acceleration and found this:
Acceleration is one of those words for which we have a common meaning and
a meaning that is specific to the field of physics. Ask the average person
on the street and they will define acceleration as "speeding up." However,
this is just a portion of the full meaning of acceleration as used in
physics. In physics, acceleration is defined as a change in
velocity. Considering this definition closely, we remember that
velocity is defined as speed in a given direction. Therefore
changing the velocity of an object means changing its speed (rate of motion),
its direction of travel or both variables. An object experiencing a change
of speed or direction is said to be accelerating.
So let's say "Acceleration of the rod tip is a constantly increasing change of speed in a given direction on a
straight line plane."
Would this work?
Tom Cooper