Force of Wind on a moving object.

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The discussion revolves around calculating the sideways force exerted by wind on a moving monorail carriage, which is modeled as a rectangular box. The weight of the carriage does not affect the air resistance but could influence its stability, particularly if the center of mass is low. Participants suggest using the drag equation, which incorporates wind speed and carriage speed, to determine the force. It is noted that at a weight of 30 tonnes, air resistance is unlikely to significantly impact the carriage's behavior. Overall, the focus is on understanding how to accurately calculate the sideways force due to wind.
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Hi All,

I have a problem in which I am trying to calculate the force of the windspeed, x, on a surface area of a moving object, y.

I am applying this to a monorail model, where a monorail carriage (lets for this purpose assume its a rectangular box) with a surface area on one side is y, is traveling at s km/h, with a direct crosswind speed of x.

I am trying to ascertain if a) the weight of the carriage is important in finding out the total sideways force. We can assume that the monorail can support itself in regards to downwards force, but I am trying to find out the sideways force applied to the carriage.

If I have missed anything feel free to add your input - I only have high-school grad level physics knowledge!

Thankyou in advance,
Mark
 
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You're looking to calculate drag. Here's the equation and an explanation of how to use it: http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/drageq.html

The problem you will run into is that the drag coefficient is very difficult to calculate so you'll probably need to research and find typical drag coefficients for trains.
 
marknixon said:
Hi All,

I have a problem in which I am trying to calculate the force of the windspeed, x, on a surface area of a moving object, y.

I am applying this to a monorail model, where a monorail carriage (lets for this purpose assume its a rectangular box) with a surface area on one side is y, is traveling at s km/h, with a direct crosswind speed of x.

I am trying to ascertain if a) the weight of the carriage is important in finding out the total sideways force. We can assume that the monorail can support itself in regards to downwards force, but I am trying to find out the sideways force applied to the carriage.

If I have missed anything feel free to add your input - I only have high-school grad level physics knowledge!

Thankyou in advance,
Mark
The weight of the carriage has zero effect on the force from the air resistance - or wind.

However it is more likely the object will tip over if the position of its centre of mass is very low. But it's less likely to loose it's desired trajectory (it'll stay on the rail) if the mass of the object is very large.
 
Thankyou for your reply's.

So the drag equation is D = Cd x ((P x V^2)/2) x A

With V^2 (Velocity squared) do take the sum of the wind speed and carriage speed? i.e. if wind and carriage are same direction, addition, and if in opposite directions, subtraction?

The weight of the carriage will be high, maybe up to 30 tonnes. As it on a monorail I will need to find specifically the limitations on sideways force applied to the carriage that the monorail can handle. Does anyone know how I would be able to calculate this 'sideways' force due to the wind? Would I use the drag model again?
Thanks
Mark
 
At 30 tonnes I doubt the air resistance is going to have much effect on the behaviour of the carriage.

But yes, add the velocities together, they're vectors them insert in the equation. ie If your traveling forward at 100km/hr and you have a 100km/hr tail wind, the force from air resistancwe would be just zero. If you had a head wind of 100km/hr then V is effectively 200km/hr (that's V = 27.78m/s).
 
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