The document provides equations for calculating the velocity of an object over time when experiencing friction. The first equation shows that the force of friction is proportional to velocity, the second shows that final velocity is equal to initial velocity plus an acceleration term factoring in time and a constant, and the third shows that displacement over time for an object experiencing harmonic motion can be expressed as the product of the amplitude and the cosine of angular frequency times time.
The document provides equations for calculating the velocity of an object over time when experiencing friction. The first equation shows that the force of friction is proportional to velocity, the second shows that final velocity is equal to initial velocity plus an acceleration term factoring in time and a constant, and the third shows that displacement over time for an object experiencing harmonic motion can be expressed as the product of the amplitude and the cosine of angular frequency times time.
The document provides equations for calculating the velocity of an object over time when experiencing friction. The first equation shows that the force of friction is proportional to velocity, the second shows that final velocity is equal to initial velocity plus an acceleration term factoring in time and a constant, and the third shows that displacement over time for an object experiencing harmonic motion can be expressed as the product of the amplitude and the cosine of angular frequency times time.
Nonlinear Functional Analysis and Applications: Proceedings of an Advanced Seminar Conducted by the Mathematics Research Center, the University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 12-14, 1970