geometric mean and velocities
I just noticed irchans question way down below about whether there is an application of the geometric mean to speeds. I found that the geometric mean gets involved if we consider the average speed for two different accelerations.
Consider accelerating from a standstill:
distance = acceleration * time^2
d = at^2
accelerate over distance d twice:
avg. speed = 2d/[sqrt(d/a1) + sqrt(d/a2)]
= sqrt(d)sqrt(a1a1)/[sqrt(a1)+sqrt(a2)]/2
For example if we start from a standstill and accelerate at 6 mph/sec for a mile, and then do it again at 4 mph/sec, the average speed from the above formula will be 132 mph. If you plug 6 and 4 into the above forumlas, you have to multipy the result by sqrt(3600) to convert seconds to hours.
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