"German, from ersetzen to substitute"rlortie wrote:...
"Ersatz" is a German word for fake or imitation,
So it's a substitute for NG in a space station.
Moderator: scott
"German, from ersetzen to substitute"rlortie wrote:...
"Ersatz" is a German word for fake or imitation,
First off I haven't promised/claimed anything. We're merely discussing hypothetical results from a hypothetical simulation based on an unproven hypothesis!ME wrote: Cloud camper, please explain what that promise means... even when only applicable in some simulation: the explanation shouldn't make a difference.
So how do you know it "works" when you "can't help on the units but research is in progress. ?
I hope you start to see where all my questions come from.
And if it's easy, than why it's so hard to get a consistent answer.
My answer would be:cloud camper wrote:"Why don't we consider jerk in physics classes?"
You can trot up and down the 2D isothermal for ever but you won't generate as single calorie of energy.Grimer wrote: Posted: 20th October 2015, 10:23 am Post subject: re: A kiiking rider is only days away!
Above is an orthographic view of the Carnot cycle variable space.
Green represents volume, blue pressure and red temperature. The arrow direction shows the power cycle. For the refrigeration cycle arrows will be in the opposite direction.
Sorry about the horizontal arrows. I put them on in MS Paint. My 12 year old programmer didn't know how to put arrows on in blender (or was too idle to work it out ;-) .... ). Paint only provides horizontal and vertical arrows.
This diagram can be seen a the twisted circle show previously forced into a Procrustean orthogonal bed. This is illustrated by the angle of viewing shown below.
As you can see it is essentially the same figure 8 on it's side form as the digram I likened to an infinity sign.
I have gone for the perspective view in this case rather than the orthographic since its easier to visualise the 3D aspect.
The problem of getting energy out of the pendulum is essentially the same problem as getting energy out of the Carnot cycle.
In the Carnot everything depends on the adiabatic legs of the cycle. Without these there is no power.
Likewise, in the Pendulum cycle everything depends on the change in acceleration legs. Without these there is no power.
Interestingly enough I have just started to read MrVibrating's stuff on the general form and right at the start he talks about change in acceleration.
Like the men of Hindustan we seem to be looking at the same elephant. .. :-)
Fine.cloud camper wrote:First off I haven't promised/claimed anything. We're merely discussing hypothetical results from a hypothetical simulation based on an unproven hypothesis!
True... And yet you're using those theories too on this open forum.And if Frank chooses to theorize about those results, I can't stop him!
I don't know what you know or don't know, hence the more reasons to keep to standardized terminology.cloud camper wrote:Yup, Frank's got it right. Spinning up the yo-yo is just a 1/1 conversion of GPE to RKE - nothing magic there.Grimer wrote:(Quoting Waltzcee, who quotes cloud camper)...
More specifically,
- angular momentum energy,
- third derivative energy,
- energy produced by the third derivative force F3.
The whole reason to spin up is to create an environment where jerk energy (3rd derivative energy) can be created, amplified then stored.
Frank has been saying this for years!
The simulation is pretty convincing. The question still remains how accurate does WM2D simulate jerk energy?
Hence the physical test rig.
I think I will prolly post the sim. I don't want to emulate a certain inventor who posted over one million words without offering a single testable idea!
And it will show how Frank had it right all along and will show how shock and mechanical resonance just naturally go together!
Makes me wonder, what happens to IP/copyrights when some winning paper (or patent application) gets secretly rewritten by smart peer-reviewers who instructed you to return with something more compliant?TLW wrote:The danger here is if you create your own language, don't be surprised if nobody else understands it, even more so if you create your own science.
Aw, you made me blush.ME wrote:Furcurequs made perfect sense in some nerdy way.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/blush'she blushed at the unexpected compliment'
"According to English precedent, silence means consent."Grimer wrote: Now these map neatly onto the three Carnot variables.
1st derv. maps to volume.
2nd derv. maps to pressure.
3rd derv. maps to compreture.
And because they do so map I'm confident that by cycling around the three derivatives of motion it will be possible to get energy from a NG potential difference in an analogous way to getting energy from a compreture difference.
So thanks for your post, ME. It's helped me to organise my ideas. :-)
(sorry about the neologism, compreture. I didn't do it to annoy you.
Unfortunately there isn't a word for inverse temperature even though it's more fundamental than temperature - so I've has to invent one - :-)... )
I think that is an excellent idea for people not to interrupt the line of argument on your new thread.MrVibrating wrote:@Fletch - Cheers mate but I'm done with this thread for now, it's got a bit long and and everything I've gained here pretty much distils down into my new thread... (which incidentally I do appreciate remaining clear for now, not least since I've little idea what the hell I'm doing, much less able to answer many questions on it)..
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... 927#150927Grimer wrote:We've all been there.
ME wrote: But in the midst of your use of all those other words and terminology (either taught in Physics-class or not) it puzzles me even more...
You still need to know what Frank precisely meant by this "3rd derivative energy" before knowing for sure your hypothetical sim has a hypothetical probability that "it will show" what Frank actually meant..right?
(seems like good promising start of a claim)
While reclaimed again with the recent "But 3rd derivative effects show up in simulation"