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From: Riccardo on 10 May 2010 07:59 "Luca Turchet" <tur(a)imi.aau.dk> wrote in message <hs8rm0$otp$1(a)fred.mathworks.com>... > Hi Riccardo, > thanks for your answer. > > > The answer depends on whether you can apply the constant acceleration kinematics equations or not. If you can, then acc = F(s1, s2, v1, v2). > > Yes the acceleration is constant. > What do you mean with F? I am searching this formula. > > Could you please give me an example? ....I don´t understand clearly, sorry :-( > > Help! > > Thanks > > Best See e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinematics , last formulas for the constant acceleration case.
From: Luca Turchet on 10 May 2010 10:14
Thanks sooooooo much!!!! "Riccardo" <nothx(a)nospam.org> wrote in message <hs8sec$emh$1(a)fred.mathworks.com>... > "Luca Turchet" <tur(a)imi.aau.dk> wrote in message <hs8rm0$otp$1(a)fred.mathworks.com>... > > Hi Riccardo, > > thanks for your answer. > > > > > The answer depends on whether you can apply the constant acceleration kinematics equations or not. If you can, then acc = F(s1, s2, v1, v2). > > > > Yes the acceleration is constant. > > What do you mean with F? I am searching this formula. > > > > Could you please give me an example? ....I don´t understand clearly, sorry :-( > > > > Help! > > > > Thanks > > > > Best > > See e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinematics , last formulas for the constant acceleration case. |