Understanding the Role of Air Resistance in Solving Complex Scientific Problems

AI Thread Summary
Air resistance plays a crucial role in solving complex scientific problems, particularly in physics. The discussion highlights confusion regarding a specific homework problem related to vector components and the mathematical constant e. Participants suggest understanding the definition of e and its relationship to exponential decay in the context of air resistance. There is emphasis on breaking down vectors into horizontal and vertical components to clarify the problem. The conversation encourages reasoning through the mathematical concepts to arrive at a logical solution.
errubio
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Homework Statement



all information is on picture

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I read the paper and understood it but when I got to the first question I was really confused. I do not even know what the problem is asking. This problem could give me an A in the class but its confusing the hell out of me. where did the e come from. If anyone can give me any hints or anything I would really appreciate it. I have worked on it for about 2 hours and I cannot figure it out. Please help
 

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I end up with Vx=e^(-Yt) where Y=b\m
But i don't know where the cosine comes from for part 1
 
errubio said:
I end up with Vx=e^(-Yt) where Y=b\m
But i don't know where the cosine comes from for part 1

Are you familiar with adding vectors together and with splitting a vector into horizontal and vertical components?
 
for the first part, where

V,x(t)=V0costheta(e^-gamma(t)) I would search up the true definition of e. I believe it has to do with taking the limit as n->infinity of (1 +r/n)^1/n, but I think I'm wrong. Once you gather this information, think about it's meaning and relate it to this problem to prove that this is true.
 
oops I was close:
e = limn->infinity (1 + 1/n)^n.
http://mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.e.html
where let's say you have V0 then V=V0(1+a/n)^nt if P=P0(1+r/n)^nt=P0(e^rt)due to the limit as n approaches infinity.

Don't quote me on this one, but just try to reason this analysis out to provide a thoughtful proof that makes logical sense.
 
I'd then relate this analysis to euler's method. You know what that is right? I mean I hardly do, but this limit as n approaches infinity seems analogous to euler's method.
 
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