Chronology | Current Month | Current Thread | Current Date |
[Year List] [Month List (current year)] | [Date Index] [Thread Index] | [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] | [Date Prev] [Date Next] |
At 10:51 AM -0600 12/17/00, brian whatcott, you wrote
The maximum power theorem is well known to electrical engineers.
It may be expressed like this:
Maximal power is transfered when the source impedance equals
the characteristic impedance of the output.
At 17:44 12/18/00 -0500, Chuck Britton responded:
/snip/
Using the analogy to the electrical case where P = IV , mechanics has
P = F x v (velocity)
Electrical impedance is V/I so I suggest that mechanical 'impedance'
is F / v = m (a/v).
Chuck Britton
Thanks Chuck.
One reason I imagine that mechanical impedance doesn't show up more
often is that you can't rely on linearity of forces etc., and the
quantities involved are not quite so easily measured.
Sincerely
Brian
brian whatcott <inet@intellisys.net> Altus OK
Eureka!