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Top Comments (10)
I thoroughly enjoy how simple you break this down
you are one of the motivations that keep going in my academics
thanks for the help, my teacher sucks so much at teaching physics. he took 3 periods to give a non-explanation for what you did in 13 minutes!
Physics - Free Formula Sheets: https://www.video-tutor.net/formula-sheets.html Full Relative Velocity Video: https://bit.ly/3jTERKn Physics 1 Final Exam Review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwkhvFlNFp0 Physics PDF Worksheets: https://www.video-tutor.net/physics.html
Another video to ease my academic stress and keeps my mind at peaceful state ☺️😊
Sally is hardly walking away from john
I DONT NECESSARY NEED IT BUT LEARNING IS FUN AND EASY IF EXPLAINED SIMPLY
We may actually break it down. Eg. John is on a train moving east at 69 mph. John’s velocity with respect to the train is 4.20 mph. How can we find John’s velocity to the ground/an observer? V(John/ground)=V(train/ground)+V(John/train). What it means is that we treat the train as a medium, adding the sum of the velocity of train to the ground and the velocity of John to the train.
After watching this,i don't need to use formula's for this types of problem,thanks a million🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰
Sally is trying to get away from John.
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Top Comments (10)
I thoroughly enjoy how simple you break this down
you are one of the motivations that keep going in my academics
thanks for the help, my teacher sucks so much at teaching physics. he took 3 periods to give a non-explanation for what you did in 13 minutes!
Physics - Free Formula Sheets: https://www.video-tutor.net/formula-sheets.html Full Relative Velocity Video: https://bit.ly/3jTERKn Physics 1 Final Exam Review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwkhvFlNFp0 Physics PDF Worksheets: https://www.video-tutor.net/physics.html
Another video to ease my academic stress and keeps my mind at peaceful state ☺️😊
Sally is hardly walking away from john
I DONT NECESSARY NEED IT BUT LEARNING IS FUN AND EASY IF EXPLAINED SIMPLY
We may actually break it down. Eg. John is on a train moving east at 69 mph. John’s velocity with respect to the train is 4.20 mph. How can we find John’s velocity to the ground/an observer? V(John/ground)=V(train/ground)+V(John/train). What it means is that we treat the train as a medium, adding the sum of the velocity of train to the ground and the velocity of John to the train.
After watching this,i don't need to use formula's for this types of problem,thanks a million🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰
Sally is trying to get away from John.