Filter löschen
Filter löschen

Converting velocity, time, and force data into acceleration

13 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Anthony
Anthony am 6 Jan. 2014
Bearbeitet: Youssef Khmou am 7 Jan. 2014
Hello, I am working on a project and am running into a problem converting velocity data into acceleration data. I have velocity data from an ADV as well as force data from a ring transducer on a pile in a wave tank experiment. What would be the easiest way to obtain acceleration data to use in later codes (to obtain drag and inertia coefficients). Thank you.

Antworten (2)

Laurent
Laurent am 6 Jan. 2014
Assuming that you have a time series of velocity values, you could just calculate the derivative of the velocity by using the command 'diff' and then dividing by the time difference between adjacent velocity values. Is this what you need?

Youssef  Khmou
Youssef Khmou am 6 Jan. 2014
Like Laurent said, a=diff(v)./diff(t), you compare that result with F/m with m being the mass of the considered system,
  3 Kommentare
Jan
Jan am 6 Jan. 2014
gradient is more accurate than the divided differences.
Youssef  Khmou
Youssef Khmou am 7 Jan. 2014
Bearbeitet: Youssef Khmou am 7 Jan. 2014
i never used gradient for velocity, but for 2D fields. i think diff is standard, while gradient needs to adjust the step h to be the same as Ts=1/Fs, as in this demo :
t=0:0.01:10;
v=2*t;
a1=diff(v)./diff(t);
a1(end+1)=a1(end);
a2=gradient(v,0.01);
plot(t,a1,t,a2,'r')
legend('diff(v(t))','\nabla v(t)');
if Ts is not known, its not convenient to use grad, !?

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Kategorien

Mehr zu Oceanography and Hydrology finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by