- In
classical physics and
special relativity, an
inertial frame of
reference (also
called inertial space, or
Galilean reference frame) is a
frame of reference...
- An
inertial navigation system (INS; also
inertial guidance system,
inertial instrument) is a
navigation device that uses
motion sensors (accelerometers)...
- Look up
inert or
inertness in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Inert may
refer to:
Chemically inert, not
chemically reactive Inert gas
Noble gas, historically...
- An
inert gas is a gas that does not
readily undergo chemical reactions with
other chemical substances and
therefore does not
readily form
chemical compounds...
- used to
transform acceleration measurements into an
inertial reference frame (hence the term
inertial navigation)
where they are
integrated once to get...
-
force is an
inertial (or fictitious)
force that acts on
objects in
motion within a
frame of
reference that
rotates with
respect to an
inertial frame. In...
-
Inertial waves, also
known as
inertial oscillations, are a type of
mechanical wave
possible in
rotating fluids.
Unlike surface gravity waves commonly seen...
-
results from that force. An
object with
small inertial m**** will
accelerate more than an
object with
large inertial m**** when
acted upon by the same force....
- anti-aircraft
artillery on ships, and as the
basis for
older mechanically based inertial navigation systems. See
Inertial measurement unit v t e v t e...
- that
undergoes acceleration with
respect to an
inertial frame. An
accelerometer at rest in a non-
inertial frame will, in general,
detect a non-zero acceleration...