Want this question answered?
by displacement...
Velocity is displacement/time.
work depends on:FORCE and DISPLACEMENT. it is directly proportional to both of them. work can be calculated by the product of force and displacement. if displacement is in a certain direction to the applied force then work done is calculated by force*displacement cos(angle). work done becomes 0when:- *displacement is 0 or the initial point and final point are the same. *displacement is in perpendicular direction to force applied.
Velocity is defined asv = dx/dtwhere:v is velocity;dx is displacement;and dt is elapsed time.Assuming velocity is constant, then displacement is calculated as:dx = v/dt.
The design of the hull will determine what the displacement of water is. Also, the weight of the cargo in/on the ship.
simply, ship has three tonnage weights 1-Displacement :is the actual total weight 2-light weight :ship's hull, machinery and any fixed equipments. 3-dead weight : fuel,water ballast , fresh water , cargo,passenger and stores. then Displacement = Dead Wt + Light Wt displacement can be calculated from Block coefficients at certain drafts from ship hydrostatic curves eng. Ibrahim nasr ibrahim.nasr@alex4all.com
by displacement...
Displacement can be measured in any unit that measures distance but the SI unit is meters. When talking about the displacement of a ship, it refers to the mass of water that the ship displaces. This is actually equal to the weight of the ship and is usually expressed in metric tons.
simply, ship has three tonnage weights 1-Displacement :is the actual total weight 2-light weight :ship's hull, machinery and any fixed equipments. 3-dead weight : fuel,water ballast , fresh water , cargo,passenger and stores. then Displacement = Dead Wt + Light Wt displacement can be calculated from Block coefficients at certain drafts from ship hydrostatic curves eng. Ibrahim nasr ibrahim.nasr@alex4all.com
by displacement...
Displacement= Volume x Density for example to find the displacement of a ship you would do this formula: underwater volume(m3) x density(t/m3) so if you are a deck cadet like me this is the formula you would use to find the displacement of a ship in the first ship stability test! THIS IS WRONG! THERE ARE MANY DIFFERENT TYPES OF DISPLACEMENT FOR-INSTANCE THOSE USED IN PHYSICS ALL HAVE DIFFERENT FORMULE
Sure - unless it is a ship or air vessel
it can be calculated at a particular instant as it is total displacement in given time
Velocity is displacement/time.
The deadweight of the ship is the result from the total displacement when loaded up to the summer freeboard mark minus the lightship displacement. The lightship displacement is the weight of the ship without any cargo, fuel, passengers, stores, mail, water and ballast.
work depends on:FORCE and DISPLACEMENT. it is directly proportional to both of them. work can be calculated by the product of force and displacement. if displacement is in a certain direction to the applied force then work done is calculated by force*displacement cos(angle). work done becomes 0when:- *displacement is 0 or the initial point and final point are the same. *displacement is in perpendicular direction to force applied.
this can be calculated by measurements of the bore