hello I am doing a school project and the teacher gave this challenge (to build the pendulum), but my friends and I did so that the balls were all uncoordinated, could you put the wires and measure the frame size, to help me pendulum do?
and also the weight of the marbles, all have the same weight?
These are primitive example of the late John Whitney's Differential Dynamics which he used in his computer films. With the help of Mike Tusch and Dave Snowdon over 15 years, I have developed techniques on the shoulders of Whitney's principle which we call harmonic maths. I used HM for Pete Townshend's Lifehouse-Method musical portraiture system. With graphics speeds today, we can choreograph 30,000 points calculated in realtime. see lawrenceball org and visualharmony org
hello I am doing a school project and the teacher gave this challenge (to build the pendulum), but my friends and I did so that the balls were all uncoordinated, could you put the wires and measure the frame size, to help me pendulum do?
and also the weight of the marbles, all have the same weight?
pintodaguanatoioba 5 months ago
What program did you use?
AeroJimE27 7 months ago
@AeroJimE27 I used Mathcad 11 to plot single frames along with some "see through" data then used its animation tool to capture the video.
httprover 7 months ago
Thanks for the description. Interesting that you included Rayleigh drag.
TupoyVolk 8 months ago
These are primitive example of the late John Whitney's Differential Dynamics which he used in his computer films. With the help of Mike Tusch and Dave Snowdon over 15 years, I have developed techniques on the shoulders of Whitney's principle which we call harmonic maths. I used HM for Pete Townshend's Lifehouse-Method musical portraiture system. With graphics speeds today, we can choreograph 30,000 points calculated in realtime. see lawrenceball org and visualharmony org
LawrenceBall 9 months ago