Hi, I try to solve below question but I have a problem, my answer is wrong
2 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Write a function that is called like this: amag = accelerate(F1,F2,m). F1 and F2 are three-element column vectors that represent two forces applied to a single object. The argument m equals the mass of the object in units of kilograms. The three elements of each force equal the x, y, and z components of the force in Newtons. The output variable amag is a scalar that is equal to the magnitude of the object’s acceleration. The function calculates the object’s acceleration vector a by using Newton’s law: F = ma, where F is the sum of F1 and F2. Then it returns the magnitude of a. Hint: we are talking about physical vectors here, so the Pythagorean theorem will come in handy.
My answer is;
function amag = accelerate(F1,F2,m)
F = F1 + F2;
amag = F./m;
1 Comment
Accepted Answer
More Answers (3)
Isaac DeVaughn
on 6 Dec 2017
I think i understand the your answer basically there's an extra formula for the magnitude of F=squareroot(Fx^2+Fy^2+Fz^2) that is supposed to be implied by that last line. I didn't understand that from the question but thats kinda how magnitude works
1 Comment
Amit Kumar
on 19 Feb 2018
what is wrong with code? this code runs correctly for some values but showing error for F1=[1;0;0], F2=[0;1;0] and m=1 function [ amag ] = accelerate( F1,F2,m ) F=(sqrt(F1.^2)+sqrt(F2.^2)); amag=sum(F/m); end
0 Comments
Muniba Arshad
on 9 Jul 2018
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 9 Jul 2018
Guys this is the correct solution,
amag = accelerate(F1,F2,m)
F_sum = F1 + F2;
F = sqrt(F_sum(1,1)^2+F_sum(2,1)^2+F_sum(3,1)^2);
amag = F/m;
Explanation: First add the vectors then find the magnitude of resultant vector and apply the formula a=F/m on it.
2 Comments
See Also
Categories
Find more on General Physics in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!