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@anthraxiom , what is the source of this question? Is it something you or a colleague made up?
i really didn't want to find the answer per se i just wanted to see if an expression could be found which is the cause for the bizarre numbers. I really thought a solution could be attained pehaps.kuruman said:Well, I said "more realistic" as compared with reversing direction instantly. Also, no realistic bird flies for 40 hours at 100 km/h with one-second breaks between velocity reversals.
yes my friend did make it up on the flyharuspex said:@anthraxiom , what is the source of this question? Is it something you or a colleague made up?
Then we should leave it to your friend to astonish the world with an analytic solution.anthraxiom said:yes my friend did make it up on the fly
Shouldn't the sequence of touches form a convergent infinite series?haruspex said:Then we should leave it to your friend to astonish the world with an analytic solution.
The flight is still symmetrical.erobz said:You lose that rather nice time symmetry for the return trip if you do.
I agree, but the challenge for the accelerating train and pausing bird ,how far do you have to compute until the pattern becomes clear is the problem.MatinSAR said:Shouldn't the sequence of touches form a convergent infinite series?
I mistakenly thought this was like the classic train-and-bird problem with constant speeds. With acceleration, it definitely becomes more complicated.erobz said:I agree, but the challenge for the accelerating train and pausing bird ,how far do you have to compute until the pattern becomes clear is the problem.
The bird will be accelerating during the pause on the train, its position will change. It will have a shorter return trip to close out the cycle.Lnewqban said:The flight is still symmetrical.
The classic problem is "asking how far the bird travels in that case" which is turns out to be trivial if you stop and consider it. Finding the convergent series for the number of collisions seems (at least - I haven't solved it) to be much more work even in that problem (unless I haven't had an "aha" moment yet).MatinSAR said:I mistakenly thought this was like the classic train-and-bird problem with constant speeds. With acceleration, it definitely becomes more complicated.
I don't understand why you are apparently so frustrated. Is there something wrong with demonstrating the challenges of the problem by asking the OP to solve the "easier problem". Also, this is also how we make progress and learn stuff...by solving an easier problem. Are you really going to try and complain to have this thread shut down? What else is going on that is so pressing we can't be bothered to teach/learn?WWGD said:Strange how this question is swinging back and forth aimlessly, just like the bird.
Just a joke, guy. I haven't nor will I report anything.Edit: I am, though, ignoring you from now on. Feel free to reciprocate.erobz said:I don't understand why you are apparently so frustrated. Is there something wrong with demonstrating the challenges of the problem by asking the OP to solve the "easier problem". Also, this is also how we make progress and learn stuff...by solving an easier problem. Are you really going to try and complain to have this thread shut down? What else is going on that is so pressing we can't be bothered to teach?
No its not, I'm attacked relentlessly on here by the "gang" for this kind of exploration. What you are doing is signaling that this thread needs to be shut down because I'm participating in it and it has exceeded 44 posts. Do me a favor and report it...so I can be banned. I've been asking for it.WWGD said:Just a joke, guy.
Sorry, erobz, could you clarify the idea?erobz said:The bird will be accelerating during the pause on the train, its position will change. It will have a shorter return trip to close out the cycle.
In the case where the bird leaves the platform, intercepts the train, instantaneously flips and comes back to the platform the elapsed time to this point is ## T = t_1+t_1 = 2 t_1 ##Lnewqban said:Sorry, erobz, could you clarify the idea?
Not that it changes anything important in your calculations, but it still seems to me that the round flight, from the point of view of the bird, will take the same time between both moments when its velocity becomes zero (resting point and stopping-coming back point).
The following round flight will take a different time.
Where the train is at during those round flights, seems irrelevant to that fact (time forward = time backward), unless the bird overshoots and collides with the machine.
Of course, if the point of contact bird-train is used as point of reference, the first leg of the flight should take longer (more distance) than the second one.
Do you mean when the bird takes no pause at the platform?bob012345 said:In the case of constant velocity and instantaneous acceleration to speed of the bird, and the bird being a mathematical point, isn’t the number of contacts going to be infinite even when the total distance flown and total time flown is finite? That’s because no matter how short the remaining distance, the bird is always faster than the train. Maybe it’s Zeno’s bird?
Right, it bounces perfectly and instantly.erobz said:Do you mean when the bird takes no pause at the platform?
I don't know , maybe you have a look at this. I get a formula for ##t_n## that is how long it takes the bird to get to the train and is a constant to the nth power ## \propto (1 - 2q)^n ##. I find that ##q## ( a constant of speed parameters) is less than ##\frac{1}{2}## so long as the velocity of the bird does not equal that of the train (which would result in a single collision).bob012345 said:Right, it bounces perfectly and instantly.
Just like a bouncing ball on a hard surface, which frequency keeps groing up?bob012345 said:In the case of constant velocity and instantaneous acceleration to speed of the bird, and the bird being a mathematical point, isn’t the number of contacts going to be infinite even when the total distance flown and total time flown is finite? That’s because no matter how short the remaining distance, the bird is always faster than the train. Maybe it’s Zeno’s bird?
Yes, an infinite series can have a finite sum. It would seem any pause makes the number of collisions finite.erobz said:@bob012345 I think you are correct. When I think about what happens when the bird is even just a little bit faster than the train, I see what you are saying. It would always reach a point over half-way of the distance between them at the beginning of the trip out to meet the train, and it seems there will always be a trip out to the train! Its does seem to be Zeno's Bird!
Just a 1 one second pause takes you from infinite to finite number of collisions! How about a ##0. \cdots 000001## pause?
I will never understand mathematics-especially with infinities.bob012345 said:It would seem any pause makes the number of collisions finite.
Consider the case where the bird travels at infinite speed. Then the number of journeys is simply the time to the train's arrival divided by the pause length. That's obviously finite and clearly an upper bound on the number of journeys at any speed.bob012345 said:It would seem any pause makes the number of collisions finite.
After I just said I will never understand infinities (which is still true), you present this shift in perspective, and one can't help but understand it. Thats why they pay you the big bucks!Ibix said:Consider the case where the bird travels at infinite speed. Then the number of journeys is simply the time to the train's arrival divided by the pause length. That's obviously finite and clearly an upper bound on the number of journeys at any speed.
But if we consider the case where the train asymptotically approaches the station then there will always be an infinite number of journeys regardless of the speed of the bird or the pause time simply because the train takes an infinite amount of time to get there.Ibix said:Consider the case where the bird travels at infinite speed. Then the number of journeys is simply the time to the train's arrival divided by the pause length. That's obviously finite and clearly an upper bound on the number of journeys at any speed.
If it takes the train an infinite amount of time to reach the station, sure. I didn't realise that case was under discussion.bob012345 said:But if we consider the case where the train asymptotically approaches the station then there will always be an infinite number of journeys regardless of the speed of the bird or the pause time simply because the train takes an infinite amount of time to get there.