Re: Velocity and Momentum Indicators

13
T3(vhf adaptive) velocity mtf
This is an T3 vhf adaptive Velocity indicator by MRTOOLS with interpolated mtf - 20 prices - user friendly - adapting speed function - line width option too
I think it can be form long/short in any situation easily,thanks to VHF Adapting Filter inventor and MRTOOLS :)
Indicator is just a tool.

Use it only if it can benefit you. Leave it if you don't know how to use it optimally.


Re: Velocity and Momentum Indicators

17
parkin1947 wrote: Sun May 14, 2017 1:22 am
Dear mntiwana !
And what have you got on the screen in Elliot Oscillator so interesting ? As such, I have not seen such.
You can touch live ?
That would be this indicator
Attaching a slightly upgraded version

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RomanUkraine, 太虚一毫

Re: Velocity and Momentum Indicators

18
Linear Momentum


Implementation in MetaTrader Custom Indicator:

The following will explain why it’s called Linear Momentum in Forex:

p = momentum;
m = mass, converted into volume of trade or tick; I would prefer to use tick volume because it’s more easy to find tick information than volume of all lots traded around the world;
v = velocity, it’s a value taken from pips movement divided by timeframe (point/seconds, originally in m/s)

To understand how a change in momentum affects an object, we look to impulse. In this lesson, you'll understand how impulse describes an object's change in momentum, as well as how changing the force or time of the impulse can have very different outcomes.

Sarah Friedl said :

Impulse Affects Momentum
Any moving object can have momentum. This is because momentum is mass in motion. The way we determine an object's momentum is fairly straightforward. Momentum is the object's mass times its velocity, or, in equation form, p=mv, where p is momentum, m is mass in kilograms, and v is velocity in meters per second. Momentum is proportional to both mass and velocity, meaning that a change in one will cause the same amount of change in the other. So if you increase an object's mass, you also increase its momentum. The same is true for velocity: increase or decrease the object's speed, and you increase or decrease its momentum by the same amount.

But usually it's the object's velocity that changes instead of its mass, right? You may remember that a change in velocity means the object is accelerating. You may also remember that acceleration is caused by a force and that the greater the force, the greater the acceleration. Therefore, the greater the acceleration, the greater the momentum!

Force is an important factor, but time also counts. Specifically, when we are interested in knowing how long the force acts. For example, if you push a box across the floor for just a few seconds, the time interval is very short. But if you push a box across the floor and you do so with the same force as before, but this time for several minutes, you've increased the amount of time the force acts. This longer time interval leads to a greater change in momentum. This change in momentum is called impulse, and it describes the quantity that we just saw: the force times the time interval it acts over. The greater the impulse, the greater the change in momentum. To change the impulse, you can either change the amount of force, or you can change the time interval in which that force acts. In equation form, we can write this relationship between impulse and momentum as
:

The Greek letter delta means 'change in,' and we read this equation as force times the time interval equals change in mass times velocity. Be careful not to read this as 'force times time equals mass times velocity' because now you're saying that 'impulse equals momentum.' It's important to remember that impulse is a change in momentum, not momentum itself.

Changing Time and Force
If you want a large increase in momentum, you need to exert a large force over a long time period. When you quickly shove the box, it doesn't move very quickly across the floor, but if you push it with that same force for a long period of time, you can move it all the way across the room. This is because you've increased the time variable on the left side of the equation. When an object is brought to rest, its momentum also changes, but now it decreases instead of increases. Time is especially important in this situation because a longer time interval means less force acts on the object to result in the same change in momentum.

Say for example that a stunt double jumped from a 10-story window during an action scene. Does she want to land on the sidewalk, which is very hard, or does she want to land on a soft cushion? She definitely wants to land on the soft cushion because this cushioning will increase the time of her impact and decrease the force on her as she lands. In either case, her impulse, or her change in momentum, is exactly the same because in either case, she goes from moving to a state of rest. The difference is that the change occurs over a different time period and with a different amount of force.

[*] Sarah has two Master's, one in Zoology and one in GIS, a Bachelor's in Biology, and has taught college level Physical Science and Biology.
Always looking the GREAT, never left GOOD Point...

Re: Velocity and Momentum Indicators

19
Tsar wrote: Sun May 14, 2017 4:18 am Linear Momentum


Implementation in MetaTrader Custom Indicator:

The following will explain why it’s called Linear Momentum in Forex:

p = momentum;
m = mass, converted into volume of trade or tick; I would prefer to use tick volume because it’s more easy to find tick information than volume of all lots traded around the world;
v = velocity, it’s a value taken from pips movement divided by timeframe (point/seconds, originally in m/s)

To understand how a change in momentum affects an object, we look to impulse. In this lesson, you'll understand how impulse describes an object's change in momentum, as well as how changing the force or time of the impulse can have very different outcomes.



Dear mladen,

I have a request to develop an indicator with Concepts based on Sarah theory's please...
Always looking the GREAT, never left GOOD Point...

Re: Velocity and Momentum Indicators

20
Tsar wrote: Sun May 14, 2017 4:18 am Linear Momentum


Implementation in MetaTrader Custom Indicator:

The following will explain why it’s called Linear Momentum in Forex:

p = momentum;
m = mass, converted into volume of trade or tick; I would prefer to use tick volume because it’s more easy to find tick information than volume of all lots traded around the world;
v = velocity, it’s a value taken from pips movement divided by timeframe (point/seconds, originally in m/s)

To understand how a change in momentum affects an object, we look to impulse. In this lesson, you'll understand how impulse describes an object's change in momentum, as well as how changing the force or time of the impulse can have very different outcomes.


Hi Tsar
Thanks for the detailed explained theory regarding said indicator - appreciations for your study work and contribution
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Cazz223
Indicator is just a tool.

Use it only if it can benefit you. Leave it if you don't know how to use it optimally.


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