Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mass_vector> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 12 of
12
with 100 items per page.
- Mass_vector abstract "The mass vector is a vector quantity that describes the magnitude and direction in which the mass acts for any point mass in the known universe in its movement about the universe's central axis of rotation. The discovery of the mass vector is commonly attributed to Sir Isaac Newton and is documented in a recently recovered chapter of his treatise De motu corporum in gyrum. The mass vector is defined as the resultant vector of the division of the force vector by the acceleration vector (or the derivative with respect to position of the dot product of momentum and time, which is referred to as the Hang and abbreviated Ξ). Very little is yet understood about the properties of mass vectors because they are hypothesized to exist only within the singularity of black holes where the extreme gravitational force compresses acceleration to a scalar quantity. There is some controversy regarding the definition of the mass vector, as seen in James Clerk Maxwell's treatise Matter and Motion. Maxwell defines the mass vector as follows: "... a mass-vector [is]... the operation of carrying a given mass from the origin to the given point. The direction of the mass-vector is the same as that of the vector of the mass, but its magnitude is the product of the mass into the vector of the mass. Thus, if OA is the vector of the mass A, the mass-vector is OA*A." However, this definition does not take modern quantum theory into account, and is commonly considered to be obsolete.".
- Mass_vector wikiPageID "33770890".
- Mass_vector wikiPageRevisionID "562068930".
- Mass_vector hasPhotoCollection Mass_vector.
- Mass_vector subject Category:Classical_mechanics.
- Mass_vector comment "The mass vector is a vector quantity that describes the magnitude and direction in which the mass acts for any point mass in the known universe in its movement about the universe's central axis of rotation. The discovery of the mass vector is commonly attributed to Sir Isaac Newton and is documented in a recently recovered chapter of his treatise De motu corporum in gyrum.".
- Mass_vector label "Mass vector".
- Mass_vector sameAs m.0hhv4w_.
- Mass_vector sameAs Q17103250.
- Mass_vector sameAs Q17103250.
- Mass_vector wasDerivedFrom Mass_vector?oldid=562068930.
- Mass_vector isPrimaryTopicOf Mass_vector.