How Do You Calculate the Damping Constant in a Sloped Car Scenario?

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The discussion focuses on calculating the damping constant for a car on a slope, using speed measurements over time. The initial approach involved using the relationship between force, mass, and damping, but yielded inconsistent values for the damping constant. Participants suggested considering additional forces, such as friction, that oppose the car's acceleration. A more effective method proposed was to analyze the data by plotting the change in speed over time and fitting a straight line to determine the damping constant. The conversation highlights the importance of accounting for all forces acting on the car to accurately model its motion.
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This is actually for a engineering course in modelling, and not in physics per se, but it seems to me to be fairly basic physics. Apologies in advance if it's out of place.

Homework Statement


A car with a mass of 1000 kg is held still on a slope with an inclination of 5.8 °, and then let go. Its speed v(t) is measured at intervals (t seconds): v(0) = 0 m/s, v(10) = 2.05 m/s, v(20) = 3.30 m/s, v(30) = 4.15 m/s, v(40) = 4.85 m/s, v(50) = 5.20 m/s, v(60) = 5.55 m/s. Find the effective damping constant b.


Homework Equations


Ideal damper: F_b (t) = bv(t)


The Attempt at a Solution


Okay, let me preface by saying that the problem before this one was similar: a car with mass 1600 kg is sped up, and the gas pedal is let go at t=0; speed is measured once every ten seconds from t=0 to t=60 s. (Measure data is v(0) = 4.6 m/s, v(10) = 3.1 m/s, v(20) = 2.0 m/s, v(30) = 1.37 m/s, v(40) = 0.88 m/s, v(50) = 0.64 m/s, v(60) = 0.38 m/s.) That problem asked me to model the car as a mass with a damper, and to just approximate \frac{dv}{dt} by drawing a curve of v(t) and estimate the slopes at points in order to find the damping constant b.

I solved that problem (at least I think I did) by saying that the resulting force on the mass is -bv(t) which is equal in size to m \frac{dv}{dt}, so b = \frac{-m}{v(t)} \frac{dv}{dt}; I got b to between 60-68 kg/s, except for t=60s where it went up to 106 kg/s. So my answer there was that the damping constant b was around 65 kg/s.

Now! This previous problem implies that the problem which is the topic of this thread is to be solved in a similar manner. My thinking is that, if friction and drag can be rolled into this damper model, gravity will make the car accelerate until the damper force cancels it out: m \frac{dv}{dt} = mg_{\text{parallel}} - bv(t) (where i have g_{\text{parallel}} = 9.82 \sin 5.8°). My thinking was that I could just, as before, solve for b and plug in values for v(t) and approximations of \frac{dv}{dt} without even having to solve a differential equation, but I only get wildly varying values of b. I.e. if b(t) = \frac{mg_{\text{parallel}} - m \frac{dv}{dt}}{v(t)}, then b(10)=404, b(20)=267, b(30)=222, b(40)=195, b(50)=183, b(60)=171. Solving the differential equation to v(t) = \frac{mg_{\text{parallel}}}{b} (1-e^{-\frac{bt}{m}}), inputting known values and solving for b (thank you, Wolfram Alpha) gave me values b=480, b=300, b=239, b=205, b=191, b=179. This damping constant doesn't look very constant to me.

And that's where I hit the wall. Can someone tell me, what am I doing wrong here? Are my assumptions wrong? Am I misunderstanding what is requested? I suspect that the differential equation is lacking something, but I don't know what, and I can't seem to get any clues from the accompanying course text.
 
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Determine dv/dt for the intervals 0-10 s, 10-20 s, ...and also the average speeds in these intervals. Plot dv/dt in terms of the average speeds. Fit a straight line to the points, the tangent of the line should be -b/m. See attached picture.

You can also notice that the constant terms is not g sin(5.8°). There should some other force than (b v) exist that opposes the acceleration of the car. That force - some kind of kinetic friction- is independent on the speed.
The equation should be mdv/dt =mgsin(a)-f(friction)-bv.

ehild
 

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Ooh! I get it now, rewriting the equation as a straight line, I wish that had come to me naturally... Thank you so much!
 
You are welcome.

ehild
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
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