L10_rotation
... kinetic energy. a. Identify and describe at least one characteristic they share. b. Identify and describe at least two differences between them. ...
... kinetic energy. a. Identify and describe at least one characteristic they share. b. Identify and describe at least two differences between them. ...
PHYS 307 LECTURE NOTES, Daniel W. Koon, St. Lawrence Univ.
... be lumped together with a centrifugal term to produce the effective gravitational accelerations, g. What is interesting about this is, first, that the centrifugal term produces a bit of a bulge in the Earth's equator. Second, this "effective gravitational force" does not point directly towards the c ...
... be lumped together with a centrifugal term to produce the effective gravitational accelerations, g. What is interesting about this is, first, that the centrifugal term produces a bit of a bulge in the Earth's equator. Second, this "effective gravitational force" does not point directly towards the c ...
EFFECT OF CENTRIFUGAL AND CORIOLIS FORCES DUE TO
... Here r is position vector of the particle and the other terms have their usual meaning. When a particle is at rest on the surface of earth which rotates with constant angular velocity ω about its polar axis, then: ...
... Here r is position vector of the particle and the other terms have their usual meaning. When a particle is at rest on the surface of earth which rotates with constant angular velocity ω about its polar axis, then: ...