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jomuk
Aug18-04, 09:22 PM
ok so I've got this equation

M1 = T1^2
M2 __T2^2
the _s are only for spacing purposes
can anyone tell me what it is for?

I think the M is mass and the T is tension but I really have no idea

HallsofIvy
Aug19-04, 07:18 AM
One can make up equations for anything- and different applications might give the same equation. I can't imagine starting from an equation and the asking what the application is!

I think the best one can say here is that "mass is proportional to the square of the tension" (or "tension is proportional to the square root of the mass).

ZapperZ
Aug19-04, 08:25 AM
ok so I've got this equation

M1 = T1^2
M2 __T2^2
the _s are only for spacing purposes
can anyone tell me what it is for?

I think the M is mass and the T is tension but I really have no idea

Hallsofivy was being too polite. I would criticize you for not, at the very least, put the equation you found in some context, i.e. WHERE did you find this expression? Under what topic/chapter/subject/supermarket tabloid/etc. was it written? It can't just appear out of nowhere.

Having said that, I will put one possible, consistent guess: T is the period of oscillation of a spring-mass system, and M is the mass. This is because the period of that system is given by

T = 2\pi \sqrt{\frac{M}{k}}

Zz.

expscv
Aug19-04, 08:52 AM
lol for some application in calualte the tension needed in each wire/rope for that particular mass?

Nenad
Aug19-04, 03:08 PM
ok so I've got this equation

M1 = T1^2
M2 __T2^2
the _s are only for spacing purposes
can anyone tell me what it is for?

I think the M is mass and the T is tension but I really have no idea

are these two equations or one equation written on two spaces?
do you mean"
M_1 = {T_1}^2 {M_2}{T_2}^2

Doc Al
Aug19-04, 07:09 PM
are these two equations or one equation written on two spaces?
do you mean"
M_1 = {T_1}^2 {M_2}{T_2}^2
I presume he meant it as a statement of proportionality:
\frac{M_1}{M_2} = \frac{T_1^2}{T_2^2}

The only thing that rings a bell is what ZapperZ suggested.

pervect
Aug19-04, 11:38 PM
I presume he meant it as a statement of proportionality:
\frac{M_1}{M_2} = \frac{T_1^2}{T_2^2}

The only thing that rings a bell is what ZapperZ suggested.

T could be kinetic energy, but there's really not enough data to know.

ArmoSkater87
Aug20-04, 02:47 AM
I was thinking it might be concentration and temperature...but i really dont think it is after trying to derive it using gas laws.

HallsofIvy
Aug20-04, 09:30 AM
Hallsofivy was being too polite.
Zz.

WHAT!! Someone is accusing me of being polite!!!

ZapperZ
Aug20-04, 09:33 AM
WHAT!! Someone is accusing me of being polite!!!

Damn right I did! And don't let me catch you doing that again!!

:)

Zz.

Doc Al
Aug20-04, 10:29 AM
Think I should give Halls a warning? :smile:

zynko
Aug21-04, 04:30 PM
looks like an expression of inversed perportions