Acceleration as derivate of velocity

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the application of the chain rule in calculus to derive the relationship between acceleration, velocity, and distance. The equation a = (dv/ds)(ds/dt) is clarified as a result of applying the chain rule, where acceleration (a) is expressed in terms of velocity (v) as a function of distance (s) and time (t). Participants emphasize that since both velocity and distance are functions of time, the chain rule allows for the transformation of derivatives. There is some confusion regarding the notation and application, particularly concerning the correct interpretation of the derivatives involved. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the importance of understanding the chain rule in the context of motion equations.
mentalguy
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I have problem understanding the following derivation:

a = dv/dt
v= ds/dt
(i get this part)

but then,

a = (dv/ds)(ds/dt)

I can't understand the above equation? Please can you tell me how 'a' gets that value?
 
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Have you done a section on calculus called the chain rule?

This, btw, is a mathematics question.

Zz.
 
ZapperZ said:
Have you done a section on calculus called the chain rule?

This, btw, is a mathematics question.

Zz.

yes i know the chain rule

if y=f(g(x)) then dy/dx = df/dg * dg/dx

but confused that how is that applied here?
 
s(t) (distance moved) and v(t) (speed) are are both functions of t. You can then think of v as a function of t. (For each s, find the corresponding t, then find v(t) for that t.) So dv/ds is defined and by the chain rule, a= dv/dt= (dv/ds)(ds/dt).
 
mentalguy said:
yes i know the chain rule

if y=f(g(x)) then dy/dx = df/dg * dg/dx

but confused that how is that applied here?

I don't understand the problem here.

To be able to write that chain rule, it means that you have a function v(s). Thus, since a = dv/dt, use the chain rule to write

a= dv/ds * ds/dt.

Zz.
 
What i am saying is that there is a function that v(s(t)) [v is a function of s which is a function of t]

So in that case, when chain rule is applied i get a= dv/ds * ds/t

Am i right in my thinking ?
 
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If s is a function of t, then v(t) = ds/dt, and a = dv/dt = d(ds/dt)/dt = d(ds)/(dt)^2.

In the case where a is a function of s, then multiplying dv/dt by ds/ds can be used to solve the problem (if the produced integrals are solvable). The first step is to produce an equation that can be integrated (don't forget to include the constant of integration after doing the integration):

a(s) = (dv/dt)(ds/ds) = (ds/dt)(dv/ds) = v dv/ds
a(s) ds = v dv

v dv = a(s) ds

1/2 v^2 = integral(a(s) ds) + constant
v = ± sqrt(2 (integral(a(s) ds) + constant))

Assuming (a(s) ds) can be integrated, the next integration step:

define v(s) = ± sqrt(2 (integral(a(s) ds) + constant))
v(s) = ds/dt
dt = ds/v(s)
t = integral(ds/v(s)) + constant)

Even if (ds / v(s)) can be integrated, it may not be possible to invert the equation to produce s as a function of t.
 
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mentalguy said:
What i am saying is that there is a function that v(s(t)) [v is a function of s which is a function of t]

So in that case, when chain rule is applied i get a= dv/ds * ds/t

Am i right in my thinking ?

I'm utterly puzzled here. Isn't that what I actually wrote (minus the "/t" in your post, which I assumed is a typo of "/dt")?

Zz.
 

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