06-04-2020, 01:42 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-04-2020, 02:52 PM by Jens Noriʇzsɔɥ.)
[ You could set up an own experiment by changing the original one in phyphox.org/editor/ or any other text editor: rescale the data, and accordingly adapt the axes. ]
On second though: mm/s is a velocity. I would have expected that the natural unit of vibrations is m/s² because the acceleration is what is measured?
Computing a velocity in “osczillating” motions is known to be rather unstable with common numerical integration methods: the velocity is quite likely to run away.
On second though: mm/s is a velocity. I would have expected that the natural unit of vibrations is m/s² because the acceleration is what is measured?
Computing a velocity in “osczillating” motions is known to be rather unstable with common numerical integration methods: the velocity is quite likely to run away.