What do your fellow students have to say about this ?
They also have difficulties. We sometimes meet and brainstorm but progress is slow.
Does your institution offer problem solving courses ?
We didn't have seminaries until this week, only laboratory doing experiments. But not too useful since the same course teacher (no assistants) explains exercises at the whiteboard and keeps saying "obviously" to things only 2 olympians in front row understand.
What book are you using? Is it about "naive" or "analytical" mechanics
I'm not sure but it uses only differentials, integrals and vector operations until now. It starts with theory of kinematics (position, velocity, tangential/normal acceleration, curvature/radius of curvature) then it particularizes, for movement in gravitational field (parabola movement, circular motion, harmonic motion) and then is followed by 24 exercises which I guess should be solved by just correctly understanding the theory before.
Perhaps we can help you better when you tell us, where you have problems with these concepts.
My interest is to understand logically and visually how the theory was build together from scratch (which btw. I couldn't find one YouTube video explaining kinematics thoroughly starting from defining the position vector all the way to Frenet-Serret equations and circular motion). I feel like this theory is at the basis of infinitesimal calculus and how, I think Newton for the first time (although I looked through his Principia and couldn't find it there :) ) used it so beautifully to describe motion. I feel like it is fundamental to understand this so that I can truly appreciate calculus.
On a more practical note, an exercise that I think is meant to teach how to manipulate equations by understanding the theory states that:
The kinematic equations of a material point (assume no mass - btw how is that called in English, here is coined "a mobile") are
x=A⋅cosωt ; y=B⋅sinωt ; A,B,ω - positive constants.
Find: a) implicit equation F(x,y)=0 ; b) velocity v(x,y) and it's hodograph c) total,tangential,normal accelerations d) radius of curvature R(x,y) of the trajectory
So how I imagine this problem according to the theory, I have the movement of the material point (mobile) that is drawn by the position vector r(t) such that the components of i, j unit vectors vary as the functions x(t) and y(t) given. If I understood correctly, F(x,y) is obtained by taking t from say x(t) and substitute it in y(t) therefore getting the actual path which is the function F(x,y). Unfortunately I don't know how to plot this trajectory especially since t=arccos(x/A)/ω. But assuming I can plot this function of 2 variables, then it should follow that from this known trajectory to find the velocity vector defined as the tangent on this curve/trajectory, that is actually another "position-like" vector of the form v(t) with components say v
x(t), v
y(t) that form another V(x,y) function that describes I guess a velocity curve/trajectory ? By the time this is similarly repeated for the acceleration I'm totally lost because of the tangential/normal/bi-normal acceleration namings, that doesn't tell me anything after so many tangents and curves drawn and how it's related to the original trajectory intuitively. Also further on, where does the circular motion fit in all of this ?
Anyway I hope is not total gibberish what I'm explaining here but that's how I understand the theory so far...
Also thanks a lot for all your efforts to write back so much!