subject
Mathematics, 16.04.2021 23:30 L3Zenith

A pendulum in motion can either swing from side to side or turn in a continuous circle. The point at which it goes from one type of motion to the other is called the separatrix, and this can be calculated in most simple situations. When the pendulum is prodded at an almost constant rate though, the mathematics falls apart. Is there an equation that can describe that kind of separatrix?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Mathematics

question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 15:30
In δabc, if the length of side b is 3 centimeters and the measures of ∠b and ∠c are 45° and 60°, respectively, what is the length of side c to two decimal places?
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 21.06.2019 22:40
20.ju inces. which ordered pair is a viable solution if x represents the number of books he orders and y represents the total weight of the books, in ounces? (-3,-18) (-0.5, -3) (0,0) (0.5, 3)
Answers: 1
question
Mathematics, 22.06.2019 02:40
An oil exploration company currently has two active projects, one in asia and the other in europe. let a be the event that the asian project is successful and b be the event that the european project is successful. suppose that a and b are independent events with p(a) = 0.2 and p(b) = 0.8. (a) if the asian project is not successful, what is the probability that the european project is also not successful? (b) what is the probability that at least one of the two projects will be successful? (c) given that at least one of the two projects is successful, what is the probability that only the asian project is successful? (round your answer to three decimal places.)
Answers: 3
question
Mathematics, 22.06.2019 04:00
Type the next three numbers in a sequence 80, 90, 85, 95, 90, 100, 95, 105
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
A pendulum in motion can either swing from side to side or turn in a continuous circle. The point at...
Questions
question
English, 16.10.2021 20:40
question
Mathematics, 16.10.2021 20:40
question
Mathematics, 16.10.2021 20:40
question
Mathematics, 16.10.2021 20:40