jsmith613
- 609
- 0
If I had a value of 6V and then found the log which is 1.79 (3.s.f) what are the units of this quantitiy? or is it dimensionless?
why?
why?
jsmith613 said:If I had a value of 6V and then found the log which is 1.79 (3.s.f) what are the units of this quantitiy? or is it dimensionless?
why?
berkeman said:Why would you take the log of 6V? You would normally take the log of a dimensionless quantity, like the ratio of 6V/1V, or 6V/1mV.
jsmith613 said:capacitor equation (exponential equation)
the straight line graph is a log graph - is the value dimensionless or not?
berkeman said:What capacitor equation? AFAIK, the quantities in exponents and logarithms are dimensionless. I'm not sure that's always true though.
jsmith613 said:the equation is V = Voe-t/RC
V and Vo are both measured in volts?
thus the straight line is
ln(V) = ln(Vo) - t/RC
Dadface said:RC and t both have the dimensions of time and so the ratio t/RC is dimensionless (and unitless).ln(V) and ln(Vo) must also be dimensionless and unitless for the equation to balance.
jsmith613 said:so how can the exponential equaiton be used to predict the voltage at any point in time?
berkeman said:It is used to show you the ratio of the current voltage to the original voltage...
jsmith613 said:seems unlikely... my book states the voltage value as a united quantity (i.e: Volt)
jsmith613 said:thus the straight line is
ln(V) = ln(Vo) - t/RC
berkeman said:I don't think that is valid. The more correct way to do it is like this:
V/Vo = e-t/RC
and then take the ln() of both sides. That way the quantity inside the ln() is dimensionless.
It's a good question.jsmith613 said:the equation is V = Voe-t/RC
V and Vo are both measured in volts?
thus the straight line is
ln(V) = ln(Vo) - t/RC