Recent content by PhysicsKid0123

  1. PhysicsKid0123

    Help with interpreting an interpolation problem

    Sorry, I don't know how to enable LaTex.
  2. PhysicsKid0123

    Help with interpreting an interpolation problem

    Homework Statement I don't know if this is the appropriate place to ask this, but I really do need some help. I am doing a homework problem and I don't understand what is being asked. It goes as follows: > Write a MATLAB function to evaluate the trigonometric interpolant ##p_n(x)## for a given...
  3. PhysicsKid0123

    Center of mass, Newton's third law, and rocket thrust

    I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around this. If the thrust force is internal, and by Newton's third law, there is the reaction force that moves the rocket, how does this not induce or affect motion of the center of mass? And by the way, thanks for helping me understand this!
  4. PhysicsKid0123

    Center of mass, Newton's third law, and rocket thrust

    So Goldstein says: "In order that the motion of the center of mass (didn't make reference to just the rocket alone, it is kind ambiguous) be unaffected, the ejection of the exhaust gases at high velocity must be counterbalanced by the forward motion of the vehicle." Can you elaborate what is...
  5. PhysicsKid0123

    Center of mass, Newton's third law, and rocket thrust

    Center of mass would actually move for the combined system of astronaut and hammer. These are slides which briefly paraphrase Goldstein's classical mechanics-- these equations is Newtons 2nd law for a system of particles.
  6. PhysicsKid0123

    Center of mass, Newton's third law, and rocket thrust

    Can someone clarify this for me-- how is the motion of the center of mass unaffected by internal forces, as is stated towards the end of the paragraph in the picture I've provided. It seems to me that motion of the center of mass directly affected by these internal forces. Specifically, the...
  7. PhysicsKid0123

    Other Computational mathematics vs Applied Mathematics

    Hello PF community, I have a question about a choice that I need to make soon and I would like some opinions from the community. So I am double majoring in physics and applied mathematics at the moment, and I have been thinking about changing my second major to computational mathematics instead...
  8. PhysicsKid0123

    Time Derivative of Unit Vectors

    okay, that's true, now I remember. Thanks.
  9. PhysicsKid0123

    Time Derivative of Unit Vectors

    I'm talking about the unit vectors in Cartesian coordinates themselves \mathbf{e}_1 = \mathbf{x}, \mathbf{e}_2 = \mathbf{y}, \mathbf{e}_3 = \mathbf{z}
  10. PhysicsKid0123

    Time Derivative of Unit Vectors

    Quick question (a little rusty on this): Why don't unit vectors in Cartesian Coordinates not change with time? For example, suppose \mathbf{r} (t) = x(t) \mathbf{x} + y(t) \mathbf{y} + z(t) \mathbf{z} How exactly do we know that the unit vectors don't change with time? Or in other words...
  11. PhysicsKid0123

    Measurement-Free Interactions (MFI)

    So I have not been able to find too much information about this. Specifically in the context of the double slit experiment. I've seen just about the only video on Youtube that tries to explain this, but I did not understand-- I felt like somethings were not explained. I am acquainted with why a...
  12. PhysicsKid0123

    What Is Conformal Mapping in Complex Analysis?

    What exactly is meant by "rotation"? What exactly is rotating and rotating relative to what? Are the curves themselves rotating? I'm not sure if I understand...
  13. PhysicsKid0123

    What Is Conformal Mapping in Complex Analysis?

    "Definition: A map ƒ: A ⊂ ℂ→ ℂ is called conformal at z0, if there exists an angle θ ∈[0,2Pi) and an r > 0 such that for any curve γ(t) that is differentiable at t=0, for which γ(t)∈ A and γ(0)= z0, and that satisfies γ ' ≠0, the curve σ(t) = ƒ(γ(t)) is differentiable at t=0 and, setting u =...
  14. PhysicsKid0123

    Can Asymmetric Wave Functions Arise from Symmetric Potentials?

    Yes, that's right. Not boundary conditions, but continuity conditions. I've also fixed the the k^2 typo. I suspect there may be more typos and I might have to rework the problem to make sure I've stated everything correctly. So I didn't understand the parity operator part of your response, but...
Back
Top