Did nobody teach you the STD triangle?
D
S-T
Distance = SpeedxTime
Speed = Distance/Time
Time = Distance/Speed
hurr
D
S-T
Distance = SpeedxTime
Speed = Distance/Time
Time = Distance/Speed
hurr

-Sh1fty- wrote:
Ok but what about the bicycle problem? I'm still sort of lost. Minty helped but I'm still confused.I'm so freaking bad at this. T = time right? So what the hell does 72t mean? 72 * t?A cyclist leaves the town of Ouchy towards Cully at 15:00. His average speed is 18km/h. Another man is walking from Cully to Ouchy and he leaves at 14:30. His average speed is 7.2km/h.
The distance separating the two towns is 10km.
No way I'm ever passing this fucking school, why did I ever take these extra courses? I just wanted to finish a year earlier...
Last edited by presidentsheep (2010-02-25 15:07:04)
right so given t=time-Sh1fty- wrote:
Uhhh yeah well here's another exercise I've got to do, this one is with bikes, maybe this'll help.
A cyclist leaves the town of Ouchy towards Cully at 15:00. His average speed is 18km/h. Another man is walking from Cully to Ouchy and he leaves at 14:30. His average speed is 7.2km/h.
The distance separating the two towns is 10km.
The question is:
At what time and what distance from Ouchy will they cross each other?
That's a good diagram.. almost on par with my train crashPeter wrote:
I just looked at my post and remembered how proud I was of my cyclist diagram.
Fairly sure I was taught to write x like that in order to avoid confusion in later life.Bevo wrote:
I don't think I learned the cross or dot product in HS...
and they certainly wouldn't teach vector multiplication BEFORE simple things like velocity and displacement
Was writing x like that since like 3/4 grade. Cause 7xy =/= 7xyliquidat0r wrote:
Fairly sure I was taught to write x like that in order to avoid confusion in later life.Bevo wrote:
I don't think I learned the cross or dot product in HS...
and they certainly wouldn't teach vector multiplication BEFORE simple things like velocity and displacement
Last edited by DrunkFace (2010-02-26 00:45:29)
No one taught me that... and I am glad.Finray wrote:
Did nobody teach you the STD triangle?
D
S-T
Distance = SpeedxTime
Speed = Distance/Time
Time = Distance/Speed
hurr
yeah, i used to write x as a cross but i eventually became so annoyed because i kept mixing up x and * in like 10xy or 10*y that i decided to do the curly version (although my handwriting is always fairly curly)liquidat0r wrote:
Fairly sure I was taught to write x like that in order to avoid confusion in later life.Bevo wrote:
I don't think I learned the cross or dot product in HS...
and they certainly wouldn't teach vector multiplication BEFORE simple things like velocity and displacement
good luck with the test, wish I could've helped but was never good at physics, I was better at maths... was ok for the most part.....-Sh1fty- wrote:
Thanks a lot for your help guys. I'm off to do my test now. I hope I do well, sucks they give me a test right after vacation.
Why would you ever write out 10*y?Spark wrote:
yeah, i used to write x as a cross but i eventually became so annoyed because i kept mixing up x and * in like 10xy or 10*y that i decided to do the curly version (although my handwriting is always fairly curly)liquidat0r wrote:
Fairly sure I was taught to write x like that in order to avoid confusion in later life.Bevo wrote:
I don't think I learned the cross or dot product in HS...
and they certainly wouldn't teach vector multiplication BEFORE simple things like velocity and displacement
i don't know i just made that up on the spot didn't i? the point is i changed because i was getting x and * mixed up.VicktorVauhn wrote:
Why would you ever write out 10*y?Spark wrote:
yeah, i used to write x as a cross but i eventually became so annoyed because i kept mixing up x and * in like 10xy or 10*y that i decided to do the curly version (although my handwriting is always fairly curly)liquidat0r wrote:
Fairly sure I was taught to write x like that in order to avoid confusion in later life.
Coefficients are pretty much always just written as 10y. I have never seen any text book, assignment, test, hand out, example, ect... written as 10 X Y as in 10 times Y. It's just not done for that very reason.
Unless if you actually study physics on a higher level than junior high. That's just the most basic stuff for mechanics.presidentsheep wrote:
s = ut+0.5at2
s = vt-0.5at2
s = 0.5(u+v)t
v = u+at
v2 = u2+2as
a = (v-u)/t
a=acceleration, t=time, u=initial velocity, v= final velocity, s=displacement.
Only equations you'll ever need. ever.
edit:fucking smilies.
Last edited by DeathUnlimited (2010-03-01 04:14:23)
Well, really it depends on where he started and the shape of the track, and how they position NSEWGravityy wrote:
while there's a thread for this, i might just lay down my own problem
An athlete, commencing at a point due east, completes a half lap of a 440m track in 25s. Determine the athlete's:
- average velocity (in a westerly direction)
Pfffffft, I've nearly finished A-Level's and everything seems to boil down to these equations (Well... Three of them) after a while.DeathUnlimited wrote:
Unless if you actually study physics on a higher level than junior high. That's just the most basic stuff for mechanics.presidentsheep wrote:
s = ut+0.5at2
s = vt-0.5at2
s = 0.5(u+v)t
v = u+at
v2 = u2+2as
a = (v-u)/t
a=acceleration, t=time, u=initial velocity, v= final velocity, s=displacement.
Only equations you'll ever need. ever.
edit:fucking smilies.
For general physics. Have fun with quantum theory.presidentsheep wrote:
Pfffffft, I've nearly finished A-Level's and everything seems to boil down to these equations (Well... Three of them) after a while.DeathUnlimited wrote:
Unless if you actually study physics on a higher level than junior high. That's just the most basic stuff for mechanics.presidentsheep wrote:
s = ut+0.5at2
s = vt-0.5at2
s = 0.5(u+v)t
v = u+at
v2 = u2+2as
a = (v-u)/t
a=acceleration, t=time, u=initial velocity, v= final velocity, s=displacement.
Only equations you'll ever need. ever.
edit:fucking smilies.