- Poinsot motion
- gerak Poinsot
English-Indonesian dictionary. 2013.
English-Indonesian dictionary. 2013.
Poinsot's ellipsoid — In classical mechanics, Poinsot s construction is a geometrical method for visualizing the torque free motion of a rotating rigid body, that is, the motion of a rigid body on which no external forces are acting. This motion has four constants:… … Wikipedia
Louis Poinsot — (1777 1859) was a French mathematician and physicist. Poinsot was the inventor of geometrical mechanics, showing how a system of forces acting on a rigid body could be resolved into a single force and a couple.Life: Everyone makes for himself a… … Wikipedia
Constant of motion — In mechanics, a constant of motion is a quantity that is conserved throughout the motion, imposing in effect a constraint on the motion. However, it is a mathematical constraint, the natural consequence of the equations of motion, rather than a… … Wikipedia
Ronald N. Bracewell — Infobox Scientist name = Ronald N. Bracewell box width = image width = caption = birth date = Birth date|1921|07|22 birth place = Sydney, New South Wales, Australia death date = Death date and age|2007|08|12|1921|07|22 death place = Stanford,… … Wikipedia
Polhode — The details of a spinning body may impose restrictions on the motion of its angular velocity vector, ω. The curve produced by the angular velocity vector on the inertia ellipsoid, is known as the polhode, coined from Greek meaning path of the… … Wikipedia
Newton's theorem of revolving orbits — Figure 1: An attractive force F(r) causes the blue planet to move on the cyan circle. The green planet moves three times faster and thus requires a stronger centripetal force, which is supplied by adding an attractive inverse cube force. The … Wikipedia
Regular polyhedron — A regular polyhedron is a polyhedron whose faces are congruent (all alike) regular polygons which are assembled in the same way around each vertex. A regular polyhedron is highly symmetrical, being all of edge transitive, vertex transitive and… … Wikipedia
Rigid body dynamics — Classical mechanics Newton s Second Law History of classical mechanics … Wikipedia
Screw theory — was developed by Sir Robert Stawell Ball in 1876, for application in kinematics and statics of mechanisms (rigid body mechanics). It is a way to express displacements, velocities, forces and torques in three dimensional space, combining both… … Wikipedia
Euler's equations (rigid body dynamics) — This page discusses rigid body dynamics. For other uses, see Euler function (disambiguation). In physics, Euler s equations describe the rotation of a rigid body in a frame of reference fixed in the rotating body:egin{matrix}I 1dot{omega} {1}+(I … Wikipedia
Johannes Kepler — Infobox Scientist name = Johannes Kepler |175px image width = 175px caption = A 1610 portrait of Johannes Kepler by an unknown artist birth date = Birth date|1571|12|27 birth place = Weil der Stadt near Stuttgart, Germany residence = Baden… … Wikipedia