* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Circular Kinematics
Laplace–Runge–Lenz vector wikipedia , lookup
Faster-than-light wikipedia , lookup
Velocity-addition formula wikipedia , lookup
Inertial frame of reference wikipedia , lookup
Photon polarization wikipedia , lookup
Classical mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Modified Newtonian dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Angular momentum operator wikipedia , lookup
Seismometer wikipedia , lookup
Coriolis force wikipedia , lookup
Relativistic angular momentum wikipedia , lookup
Equations of motion wikipedia , lookup
Centrifugal force wikipedia , lookup
Fictitious force wikipedia , lookup
Newton's laws of motion wikipedia , lookup
Newton's theorem of revolving orbits wikipedia , lookup
Rigid body dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Jerk (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Hunting oscillation wikipedia , lookup
Circular Kinematics The London Eye This Ferris Wheel is along the Thames in London. The original Ferris Wheel was designed and constructed by George Washington Gale Ferris, Jr. as a landmark for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. How many machines using circular motion are needed to keep the passengers moving in a circle? Even though you are flying in pretty much a straight line on a passenger plane, circular motion still rules. From the engines to the navigation system, wheels, and even the doors that let you in the plane. If there is no circular motion, you are not flying! T he wheel is at the center of our “modern” society and everything we have revolves around it. In our mechanical world, it is probably the most important device ever created. Nearly every machine built since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution invokes the principles of the wheel. It’s hard to imagine any mechanized system that would be possible without the wheel or the ideas of circular motion that we learn by watching the wheel. From tiny watch gears to automobiles, jet engines and computer disk drives, the principle is the same. Working with Circular Motion The Wheel in Civilization The wheel is so important that it is hard for us to imagine advanced civilations that did not use it. But it seems there were many. Either they were more advanced, or the wheel leads to places they did not wish to travel. Wheels may be a step backward. Why? Well, it seems that the wheel just does not exist in the natural (animal) world on earth! Physics is a natural science and seeks to explain natural motion. Later on we’ll learn about circular motion of the planets and subatomic particles, but as far as mother nature here on earth, she either didn’t like wheels or just didn’t need them! It appears that the creation of the wheel was done by man. Why? If the natural world doesn’t need wheels, why do men? The wheel appears to have been a latecomer to “civilized” cultures and does not appear to have made much of an impact at all on cultures that the western world calls “uncivilized.” Information Storage due to Circular Motion Most “stone-age” peoples of the “new world” had little use for the wheel in any capacity, but it would probably not be accurate to assume that they were any less civilized than “old world” cultures. Hawaiians among others had a very highly developed society and were able to travel long distances over the open seas without any recourse to the wheel. Walls Constructed out of stones with tolerances greater than modern technology (based on wheels) can achieve. The Inca (or pre-Inca among others) are famous for having been able to construct buildings with massive stone blocks (many of which cannot be moved today) with tolerances that cannot be achieved with today’s technologies. The ancient pyramids remain a mystery. Since “modern” man cannot conceive of methods to construct them without a wheel of some type, most theories rely on rolling the stones over circular objects that functioned like wheels (dragging the blocks over trees, etc.). Virtually all modern transportation systems are based on the wheel. All electrical power generation and distribution systems need a wheel, our information systems are still dominated by the wheel. Future ones may not be. So is the wheel a symbol of an advanced civilization, or is it a limiting idea? Circular Kinematics Rotational Vectors The Right Hand Rule To study circular motion, we will need to have a way to determine how many times a circle spins (or how many times you traveled around it), and how fast and in which direction it is spinning. You have done that in previous classes by using angles measured in degrees. We’ll still do that, but we are also going to learn to measure angles another way, we are going to use the radius of the circle itself to measure the angle that the circle turns. Let’s get started. If it is rotating clockwise, the rotational vector is pointing AWAY from you. If it is rotating counter-clockwise, look out, because it is pointing at you. Circles, Angles, and Radians So, if you walk around a circle, how far did you walk? You’ll probably answer something like “it depends on how big the circle is.” But does it? If you really are trying to mess with the physics teacher, you’ll say ZERO because you are thinking about linear displacement. And you would be right, except for the fact that I asked about how far (a distance) and not for your linear displacement. Since this section is about circular motion, I might also ask you what your angular displacement was. How much angle did you walk? That is definitely not zero, unless you walk back around again (the opposite way). Angular displacement is a vector, it tells us how much we (or whatever) have rotated since the start of the problem. We usually use radians to measure angles when we are talking displacement, so it’s time to learn about radians. Work through the next animation to learn what a radian is. Angular Displacement A jogger is running on a circular track with a radius of 50.0m. What is her angular displacement when she runs 20.0m? How far has she run when her angular displacement is 5.0 radians? What is her angular displacement when she has run 1.0 km? (Answer in both radians and revolutions.) An automobile tire is guaranteed for 40,000 miles. If the diameter of the tire is about 3.0 feet, how many revolutions will the tire make in it’s lifetime? What will it’s angular displacement in radians be (assuming that it doesn’t go in reverse). The Cartesian coordinates of a point are (-2.5, 5.9). What are the polar coordinates? In Cartesian coordinates, the equation of a circle is x2 + y2 = r2. What is the equation using polar coordinates? The radius of a circle fits around the circle exactly 2*PI times. Create a conversion factor to change from radians to degrees. Create a conversion factor to change from degrees to radians. The pizza delivery person brings a 24 inch (diameter) pizza to your school for the radian physics party. How many wedge shaped pieces can be cut with a crust length equal to the radius of the pizza. What is the crust length of the remaining piece? Small Angle Approximation So, the idea is really pretty simple. A radian is just the distance you travel along the curve (arc length) divided by the radius of the curve. When angles are very small, the difference between the arc length and the chord length (b) becomes so small that we can ignore the difference. In other words, if the difference is smaller than we can measure, we can assume that the two are equal. Definition of a Radian Arc length (s) divided by the radius (r). One radian is the angle that a radius makes along the curve (arc). One radian is the angle that a radius makes along the curve (arc). This approximation makes a lot of scientific formulas much easier to deal with. It may seem like cheating, but it’s not cheating if you cannot calculate the difference, and this situation happens in the real world often enough to use small angle approximations when necessary. Small Angles So if I ask you how far (in radians) you traveled by walking around a circle, it does not depend on how big the circle is. The angular displacement is the same for all circles. To put it simply, you walked all the way around. The answer is the same for both circles; one revolution, 360 degrees, or 2π radians. On the other hand, if I ask about linear displacement, then you obviously travel farther around circles that have a bigger radius. A submarine sailor using his persicope sees a ship on the surface. From past experience, he knows the ship is 15m tall. The periscope contains divisions that tell the submariner that the ship’s height takes up 2.0 degrees of arc. One more thing to note. A radian is a length divided by a length. The basic dimensions cancel which means that a radian has no basic dimensions. It is just a number. How far away is the ship? Linear and Angular Variables Small angle approximations are usually used when the sine of an angle is pretty much the same as the angle itself. If you measure an angle to be 1.1 radians (2 significant figures), can you use small angle approximations for problems that use this angle? If you measure an angle to be 0.010 radians, can you use small angle approximations for calculations that use this measurement? ... a radian has no basic dimensions. It is just a number. Now, since s is a length, we can use the formula for a radian to help us make the kinematic equations for circular motion. Before we do that, let’s make some letters/symbols that represent angular displacement, angular velocity (how fast is it spinning), and angular acceleration (is it spinning faster or slower). Symbols for Angular Displacement Velocity and Acceleration The three letters we’ll use are theta-θ, omega-ω , and alpha-α. Let’s start with the first one. The greek letter theta-θ is normally used to indicate an angle. Our angles will usually be in radians, so on the right I have the formula for radian measure (s / r). The letter s is a linear displacement. I know what you’re going to say. I used d or x for linear displacement in the past, so why am I using s now? It’s simple! S is a curvy letter, and we are dealing with curves!!! Got it? Now that you know how s is related to θ, you can use the formulas for angular velocity (omega), and angular acceleration (alpha) to create the relationships between linear and angular displacement, velocity, and acceleration. Here they are. Formulas to convert from Linear Kinematics to Circular Kinematics Sooo then. All you gotta do to convert from angly stuff to straight stuff is slap it with a radius. (Uh, I mean multiply it.) That should make sense. The radius is the straight thing that creates a curvy one. Each of the properties on the left above is a linear one. It is also called tangential because they point in a direction that is tangent to the circle. So when you hear the words tangential velocity, tangential acceleration, and tangential displacement, you know that we are talking about vectors that are parallel (or anti-parallel) to the direction of the motion AT THAT INSTANT in time! One more thing here. These angular properties are vectors! Remember those? They have magnitude and direction. The magnitude tells us how fast it’s spinning, how much it did spin and if it’s speeding up or slowing down. The direction tell us which way it’s spinning or which way it’s changing. We will still use arrows to represent vectors, but these arrows are going to seem a little bit weird at first because they are not in the plane of the thing that is spinning. Instead, they point along the axis of rotation - kind of just out into space! In order to know which way the vector is pointing, you will need to use the right hand rule. (Watch the rotaional vector video in the sidebar.) Angular Velocity & Frequency How fast does it go around the circle? Well, how fast does it go aroung the circle? Some gifted people can run around a 400m track in one minute. And, they can do it over and over (at least 4 times in a row). That means they are running the track with an angular frequency of ONE rpm - one rotation per minute. What do I mean when I say frequency? Frequency means HOW FREQUENTLY, HOW MANY TIMES DOES IT GO ROUNDY ROUNDY; completely around! Each time it goes all the way around is called a REVOLUTION. Now, think carefully. If it goes around 1 time every minute, then the frequency is 1 rpm or one rotation per minute. But wait, a rotation is 2*PI radians, so the frequency tells us how fast the object is rotating. In other words, it is an angular velocity! It may not be in radians, but it still lets us know how fast is it spinning! Frequency & Period If you run around a 400m track 4 times in 4 minutes, how long does it take you to go around once? The answer is obviously 1 minute. The PERIOD of time that it takes to complete one cycle, or one revolution is called the period (because it’s the period of time.) See if you can figure out how the period is related to the frequency. Revolutions, Cycles, Hz A cycle is a completion of a repeating pattern. The pattern in circular motion is one complete revolution. So in circular motion, one revolution is one cycle. (There are other kinds of repeating motions that are not circular.) 65 cycles means 65 revolutions in circular motion. One cycle per second has a special name - it is known as one Hertz (or 1 Hz). Our electrical power grid revolves 60 times per second - 60 cycles per second - 60 Hz. Units and Dimensions Angles can be measured a lot of different ways. You probably learned about degrees first. Then you learned rotations (how many times does it spin) and now you know about radians. Angular Kinematic Equations And now, for the grand unveiling of the new kinematic equations for circular motion. . . We’ll do this by just substituting the new letters into the old kinematics equations. All of these usually show up as a way to describe angular velocity (frequency). Common Angular Displacement Units Type of Unit Basic Dimensions SI (mks) radians/rads revolutions revs Cycles There are no Basic Dimensions for angles. It is just a number! Common Angular Velocity Units Type of Unit Units SI (mks) rads / sec T-1 rpm rev / min T Hz cycles / sec T-1 Basic Dimensions -1 Common Angular Acceleration Units Type of Unit Units SI (mks) rads / sec2 Basic Dimensions T-2 Angular Velocity A spinning bicycle wheel is rotating counterclockwise (CCW) when you look at it. Which way is the angular velocity vector pointing? Up, down, left, right, toward you, away from you, or something else? Linear Kinematics formulas on the Left Angular Kinematics formulas on the Right Wow, no big surprise there huh. All we did was change the letters to greek. Hey! It’s all greek to me. None of the basic ideas have changed. If you understood linear kinematics, you should be able to do this too. Everything we said about averages and instantaneous values for linear kinematics is also true for circular kinematics. And now we can do problems that ask us to convert back and forth from circular to linear motion. Wow, good fun! So how do objects move in circles? Is there a special kind of circular force or something? And if it is moving in a circle, how do you keep it moving that way? Do all points on the spoke of the wheel have the same linear velocity? Look back at the Eye of London picture on the opening page of this chapter. The Eye is a ferris wheel that has passengers moving in a circular path. What force keeps them moving in a circular path? Do all points on the spoke of the wheel have the same angular velocity? Let’s look at some things that move in circular paths. Your car engine’s crankshaft is spinning at 700 rpm as shown on the tachometer. What is the angular velocity of the engine in radians per second? What is the frequency of the engine in Hz? A satellite in a circular orbit has a period of 10 hours. What is the satellite’s frequency in revolutions per day? What about in Hz? A car makes 2.5 laps around a circular track with a radius of 85m in 3.0 min. What is the car’s average angular speed? What is the car’s tangential speed? The planets in our solar system move in nearly circular paths around the sun. What force is causing them to move in a circle. The speed of the planets doesn’t change much, but their direction does. The same is true of the moon moving around the earth in a nearly circular path. Earth’s artifical satellites like the space station and other communications satellites also move in circular paths around the earth. What kind of force causes this circular motion? These wind turbines have blades that spin in circles. What type of force would keep the outer ends of these blades moving in a circle. Which way is the force directed? Angular Acceleration A merry-go-round with a diameter of 11 meters rotates once every 8.0 seconds. If it takes 3.5 seconds to get up to speed (from rest), what is the average angular acceleration during startup. After the ride is complete, the merry-go-round slows to a stop. If it rotates 3/4 of a revolution while stopping, what was its average angular acceleration during this time. A potter’s wheel moves from rest to an angular speed of 0.20 rev/s in 30 s. Find its angular acceleration in radians per second per second. If the diameter of the wheel is 0.55 m, what is the magnitude of the tangential acceleration of a lump of clay on the edge of the wheel? These motorcycles are making a circular turn. How do they do it? A car traveling at 45 mph slows to 30 mph in 15 seconds. If the diameter of the wheels is 3.0 feet, what is the average angular acceleration in radians per sec2? And what about these horses turning? Rotational Kinematics A dentist’s drill starts from rest. After 3.20 s of constant angular acceleration, it turns at a rate of 2.51 × 104 rev/min. Find the drill’s angular acceleration. Determine the angle (in radians) through which the drill rotates during this period. A centrifuge in a medical laboratory rotates at an angular speed of 3,600 rev/min. When switched off, it rotates through 50.0 revolutions before coming to rest. Or the riders in this roller-coaster? Find the constant angular acceleration of the centrifuge. (In radians per second per second.) A machine part rotates at an angular speed of 0.60 rad/s; its speed is then increased to 2.2 rad/s at an angular acceleration of 0.70 rad/s2. Find the angle through which the part rotates before reaching this final speed. The diameters of the main rotor and tail rotor of a single-engine helicopter are 7.60 m and 1.02 m, respectively. The respective rotational speeds are 450 rev/min and 4,138 rev/ min. Calculate the speeds of the tips of both rotors. Compare these speeds with the speed of sound, 343 m/s. Or this one? The tub of a washer goes into its spin-dry cycle, starting from rest and reaching an angular speed of 5.0 rev/s in 8.0 s. At this point, the person doing the laundry opens the lid, and a safety switch turns off the washer. The tub slows to rest in 12.0 s. Through how many revolutions does the tub turn during the entire 20-s interval? Assume constant angular acceleration while it is starting and stopping. A coin with a diameter of 2.40 cm is dropped on edge onto a horizontal surface. The coin starts out with an initial angular speed of 18.0 rad/s and rolls in a straight line without slipping. If the rotation slows with an angular acceleration of magnitude 1.90 rad/s2, how far does the coin roll before coming to rest? How many seconds does this take? Add Gear Ratio Problems Here is an interesting situation. The truck was driving over a circular shaped sand dune, but it doesn’t move in a circle. What happened? Is there no circular force for trucks in the sand? Or was the motion of the truck too much for the force? two kinds of circular accelerations and forces Centripetal Acceleration BIG TIME Circular Motion Way back at the beginning, we learned that objects have inertia, and that their inertia leads to them moving in straight paths at constant velocity unless some outside force gets involved. It seems pretty clear that there must be some kind of outside force acting on objects that move in circles. Forces cause acceleration. . . so . . . to put it as easy as I can, things don’t move in circles unless there is acceleration going on. Why? Because velocity is a vector. It has magnitude and direction. I’ve said that a million times now, and I’ll probably say it a million more. What is going on here? What is forcing these cars and bike riders to move in a circle? If you are moving in one direction, you’ll keep moving that way unless you turn. Pretty simple huh? Well if you turn, you just accelerated, even if you didn’t change your speed. Things that are moving in a circle (including all the molecules in a wheel that is spinning), are constantly turning which means that they must be constantly accelerating. The question is which way? Le Rotor So the acceleration - centripetal acceleration - is toward the center, toward the point around which the things rotate. It’s like they are constantly trying to get to the center but never make it there! Don’t forget that. There is no such thing as a centrifugal acceleration (or a centrifugal force) that makes something go in a circle. There is no such thing as a centrifugal acceleration (or a centrifugal force) that makes something go in a circle. The formula for centripetal acceleration can be written 2 ways. One involves the linear velocity (tangent to the path) and the other involves the angular velocity. The derivation of the formula involves some basic geometry and similar triangles; see the sidebar discussion. Oh my gosh! These people stick to the walls too, just like the last video. Where can you buy these kinds of walls. How do they make them? Uniform Circular Motion Physics books like to talk about something called uniform circular motion. It sounds like its a mystery or something when it’s said like that. So let’s keep it simple. A particle moving in uniform circular motion moves in a circle at a constant angular velocity and a constant radius. This means that an object that is spinning at a constant angular velocity has all of its molecules moving in uniform circular motion (the same angular speed). Uniform circular motion simply means that everything is moving is a circule together at a constant angular velocity! Centripetal Acceleration Remember, centripetal acceleration is a vector. The direction of the vector is constantly changing in circular motion but it always points to the center of the circle (or of the rotation). This idea can be a little bit tough to grasp without lots of thought and practice working the problems. I introduced the formula above for centripetal acceleration, but sometimes a less mathematical approach works better to help you get the idea. Click on the picture of the circle and triangle here for a graphical explanation of centripetal acceleration and forces. Not too hard. Video explanations of Circular Motion There’s lots and lots of good stuff to think about in this video. Of course, that means you have to watch it and think about it. Centripetal Acceleration In uniform circular motion, there is (a) a constant velocity. (b) a constant angular velocity. (c) zero acceleration. (d) a non-zero tangential acceleration. Centripetal Forces Acceleration is caused by force. You have to force things to revolve in a circle, they don’t seem to do it willingly. Newton’s second law says that net force is the product of mass times acceleration. If the centripetal force on a particle in uniform circular motion is increased, (a) the tangential speed will not change. (b) the tangential speed will decrease. (c) the radius of the path will increase. (d) the radius of the path will decrease. In a washing machine, the spin cycle is used to remove water from the clothes. Explain how this works! The ball on the rope is held in circular motion by the tension in the rope. It is this rope that is causing the circular motion. Circular motion is caused by real forces that you can identify, like a rope tied to a rock that you swing in circles, or the force of gravity causing the moon to go around the earth. These are real forces (tension and gravity) and they are causing circular motion. What I am trying to say is that circular motion is caused by the NET force; by one or more real forces. It is not a new magical force. Since it is a NET force, we can write an equation for it by using Newton’s second law. Here it is. In the picture we have two jars with fishing bobs (floating) in jars partially filled with water. We are going to start the arms of the machine spinning. Which way will the floats move? Will they move? Does it matter which way we spin the arms? A psycho physics teacher swings a cup of water around on a plate attached to a rope as shown in this video (link). Assume the rope is 0.50 m long. If he swings the ball around 2 times per second, what is the centripetal acceleration of the ball? What if the rope was only 0.25 meters long. What would the centripetal acceleration be then? OK, back to the rope being 0.50 meters long. If the nutso teacher swings the rope twice as fast (4.0 times per second) what is the centripetal acceleration? Space stations could be designed to rotate (as a ring or a cylinder) so that they create a centripetal force pushing inward on objects on their inner walls. This force simulates the earth’s surface pushing up on your feet to counteract the force of gravity. Suppose we design such a space station that is 5.0 mi in diameter. Centripetal Force We call the net force that makes something move in a circle a centripetal force. I’ll say this again, centripetal force is a NET FORCE! It is not a new magical circular force! . . . centripetal force is a NET FORCE! It is not a new magical circular force! Remember that centripetal means “center-seeking.” So a centripetal force will push or pull objects toward the center and the result will be circular motion. It’s worth repeating again that circular motion is not caused by an outward force that some people call centrifugal force. In fact, there is no such thing as a centrifugal force that pushes you to the outside of a circle. Things that appear to be forced to the outside of a circle are just moving in a straight line like they’re supposed to. When you feel pushed to the outside of a turn in your car or on a carnival ride, you are moving straight. Everything else is experiencing centripetal acceleration toward the center which makes it appear like YOU are being pushed to the outside, but it just ain’t so! If you want to make something that is moving with a velocity v move in a circle, you will have to push or pull on it with a force that is equal to the square of that velocity divided by the radius of the circle you want to have. If you don’t, it will not move in circular motion. Some Applications of Centripetal Force There are a lot of classic problems that test your understanding of centripetal forces. I have grouped them into a few basic categories below. CENTRIPETAL FORCE IS A NET FORCE Centripetal force is not a force that belongs on your free body diagram. Centripetal force is not a force that belongs on your free body diagram. Why? Because it is the NET force. It is the force that is the result of the real forces that should be on your free body diagram. Watch this ki`i training show. What angular speed must such a cylinder have so that the centripetal acceleration at its surface equals the free-fall acceleration on Earth? A bug sits on the rim of a 10-in.-diameter disk that moves from rest to an angular speed of 78 rev/min in 3.0 s? What is the tangential acceleration of the bug. When the disk is at its final speed, what is the tangential velocity of the bug? One second after the bug starts from rest, what are its tangential acceleration, centripetal acceleration, and total acceleration? Centripetal Force For the car in this picture to move in a circle, there must be a force pushing it inward - the centripetal force. Where does the centripetal force come from that allows the car to turn? If the seats are slippery, the passengers feel like they are being pushed to the outside of the turn. Why do they feel this? Is there a force that is pushing them outward? If the car moving at 83 km/hr goes around a turn with a 40.0 meter radius of curvature, what is the car’s centripetal acceleration? Once again, the centripetal force is the result of the real forces. There is no magical “circular force.” Centrifugal force is an illusion. You only think you are being forced to the outside of a circle because you think the circle is natural. It is not. It requires a force to go in a circle, not to leave it. Centrifugal force is an illusion. You only think you are being forced to the outside of a circle because you think the circle is natural. It is not. It requires a force to go in a circle, not to leave it. If the coeffecient of static friction between the tires and the road is 0.65, will the car make it through the turn without slipping? In the previous problem, there had to be friction between the car and the tires in order to push the car inward toward the center of the circle. Sharp curves on highways and racetracks are often designed with banked turns (inclined) so that there will be a source of centripetal force even without friction. Draw a free body diagram of a car in a banked turn on a frictionless surface (look at the front or the back of the car and have the bank going up to the left or up to the right). Assuming that the Earth can be approximated as sphere that rotates about an axis connecting the north and south poles, and that it has a radius of 6,384 km. Find the centripetal accelerations of (a) a point on the equator of Earth and (b) the North Pole, due to the rotation of Earth about its axis. (Answer in m/s2 .) What is the weight of a 65.0 kg person standing on the equator? What is the weight of a 65.0 kg person standing on the north pole? A 55.0-kg ice-skater is moving at 4.00 m/s when she grabs the loose end of a rope, the opposite end of which is tied to a pole. She then moves in a circle of radius 0.800 m around the pole. Determine the force exerted by the horizontal rope on her arms. Compare this force with her weight. HORIZONTAL CIRCLES AND FREE BODY DIAGRAMS The axes on your free body diagrams should be setup so that the NET CENTRIPETAL FORCE is in the same plane. Just because there is a slope does not mean you should rotate the axes. You should only rotate the axes if the motion is not in the same plane as one of your coordinate axes. A 50.0-kg child stands at the rim of a merrygo-round of radius 2.00 m, rotating with an angular speed of 3.00 rad/s. What is the child’s centripetal acceleration? What is the minimum force between her feet and the floor of the carousel that is required to keep her in the circular path? What minimum coefficient of static friction is required? Is the answer you found reasonable? In other words, is she likely to stay on the merry-go-round? An engineer wishes to design a curved exit ramp for a toll road in such a way that a car will not have to rely on friction to round the curve without skidding. He does so by banking the road in such a way that the force causing the centripetal acceleration will be supplied by the component of the normal force toward the center of the circular path. VERTICAL CIRCLES INSIDE AND OUSTIDE LOOPS (a) Show that, for a given speed v and a radius r, the curve must be banked at the angle θ such that tan θ = v2/rg. (b) Find the angle at which the curve should be banked if a typical car rounds it at a 50.0m radius and a speed of 13.4 m/s. An air puck of mass 0.25 kg is tied to a string and allowed to revolve in a circle of radius 1.0 m on a frictionless horizontal table. The other end of the string passes through a hole in the center of the table, and a mass of 1.0 kg is tied to it. The suspended mass remains in equilibrium while the puck on the tabletop revolves. (a) What is the tension in the string? (b) What is the horizontal force acting on the puck? (c) What is the speed of the puck? Tarzan (m = 85 kg) tries to cross a river by swinging from a 10-m-long vine. His speed at the bottom of the swing (as he just clears the water) is 8.0 m/s. Tarzan doesn’t know that the vine has a breaking strength of 1,000 N. Does he make it safely across the river? Justify your answer. These types of circles can cause the object to fall (inside loop) or fly off the circle (outside loop) if there is not enough energy (inside loop) or if there is too much (outside loop). The critical energy is the same for both types of loops, but the result is not. TOO STRONG FOR THE ALLOWABLE CENTRIPETAL FORCE Everything that moves in a circle has a net force that is pulling toward the center. Since the NET force must account for the speed of the object and the radius of the circle, moving too fast will cause the object to break free of the force and travel outside the circle. Not only that, moving in too small of a circle will also cause the object to break free of the force and travel outside the circle. On the other hand, moving too slow will cause the circle to shrink or break down altogether. The rope is creating the centripetal force. If you try to make the ball go in a circle too small or too fast, the rope will not be able to hold onto it. Here we have the boy swinging a ball on a rope again. The rope is under tension. It is pulling the ball toward the center of the circle. The faster he swings the ball, the stronger the force must be to keep it in a circular path. Eventually, if he swings it too fast, the rope will not be able to hold the ball and it will break allowing the ball to go sailing off. As the rope rotates, each part of the rope pulls on the parts next to it causing it to rotate in circular motion. Since all parts of the rope have the same angular speed, the parts that are closer to the ball experience a greater tension than the parts closer to the boy’s hand. Here’s another example of what happens when the available centripetal force is not strong enough to ensure circular motion. If the vehicle has a speed of 20.0 m/s at point A, what is the force of the track on the vehicle at this point? What is the maximum speed the vehicle can have at point B in order for gravity to hold it on the track? One method of pitching a softball is called the “windmill” delivery method, in which the pitcher’s arm rotates through approximately 360° in a vertical plane before the 198-gram ball is released at the lowest point of the circular motion. An experienced pitcher can throw a ball with a speed of 98.0 mi/h. Assume that the angular acceleration is uniform throughout the pitching motion, and take the distance between the softball and the shoulder joint to be 74.2 cm. (a) Determine the angular speed of the arm in rev/s at the instant of release. (b) Find the value of the angular acceleration in rev/s2 and the radial and tangential acceleration of the ball just before it is released. This chimney was blasted at the base. It began to rotate toward the ground. (c) Determine the force exerted on the ball by the pitcher’s hand (both radial and tangential components) just before it is released. Each brick of the chimney was bonded to the one next to it. The bricks farther away from the rotation point will have to bond with a greater force in order to keep the chimney rotating in one piece. A rollercoaster vehicle has a mass of 500 kg when fully loaded with passengers. In a popular amusement park ride, a rotating cylinder of radius 3.00 m is set in rotation at an angular speed of 5.00 rad/s. The floor then drops away, leaving the riders suspended against the wall in a vertical position. Demolition of a smokestack in Kentucky. Eventually, the increasing angular speed will cause some of the bonds to break because they can no longer provide the force required to maintain circular motion. Centripetal and Tangential Forces Before ending this chapter, we have to talk about circular motion forces a bit more. There are really two types of forces that we will be dealing with whenever we talk about circular motion. The centripetal force we now know is the one that pushes or pulls toward the center of the circle. The acceleration is called centripetal acceleration. Centripetal forces are always perpendicular to the motion of the object which means they cannot cause the object to speed up or slow down. (No work is done by forces that are perpendicular to the dis- What minimum coefficient of friction between a rider’s clothing and the wall is needed to keep the rider from slipping? A massless spring of constant k = 78.4 N/m is fixed on the left side of a level track. A block of mass m = 0.50 kg is pressed against the spring and compresses it a distance d. The block (initially at rest) is then released and travels toward a circular loop-the-loop of radius R = 1.5 m. The entire track and the loop-the-loop are frictionless, except for the section of track between points A and B. Given that the coefficient of kinetic friction between the block and the track along AB is μk= 0.30, and that the length of AB is 2.5 m, determine the minimum compression d of the spring that enables the block to just make it through the loop-the-loop at point C. Tangential and Centripetal Acceleration placement. If there is no work done, then the kinetic energy of the object does not change.) That’s why we can have a formula for centripetal acceleration that is related to the magnitude of the velocity; because velocity doesn’t change when only centripetal acceleration is occuring. But clearly we can cause objects to move faster and slower in circular motion. The force that does that is connected to something we call torque. Torque will cause the object moving in circular motion to accelerate in a direction that is tangent (parallel) to the motion; it will cause circular moving objects to speed up and slow down. This softball pitcher is causing both centripetal and tangential acceleration of the ball. One causes the ball to speed up (tangential) and the other causes it to stay in a circle (centripetal). Torque is the subject of our next chapter - circular dynamics, so we won’t be dealing with it much here, but you should still understand that these forces cause tangential acceleration and not centripetal acceleration. We don’t deal with torque here, because torque is essentially the application of Newton’s laws of motion to rotations. Problems 1. Assume that the Earth’s orbit around the sun is circular. tive forces, determine (a) the spring constant and (b) the speed of the projectile as it moves through the equilibrium position of the spring (where x = 0), as shown in the right picture. a) What is the orbital distance that the earth travels in 24 hours? 6. A rotating wheel requires 3.00 s to rotate 37.0 revolutions. Its angular velocity at the end of the 3.00-s interval is 98.0 rad/s. What is the constant angular acceleration of the wheel? b) How many times does the earth rotate on its axis in 24 hours (answer in revolutions and radians) 7. A cylinder 10.0 mi long and 5.0 mi in diameter is designed to rotate about its long central axis in space as a space station. The people will live on the inside of the cylinder walls. How fast does the cylinder need to rotate in order to simulate the gravity felt on the surface of the earth? 2. On a particular clock, the lengths of the hands are: Second hand: Minute hand: Hour hand: 18 cm 22 cm 8.0 cm How far does the tip of each hand travel in a 20 minute period? 3. Your car’s engine (the crankshaft) is spinning at 700 rpm as shown on your tachometer. The tires on your car have a diameter of 0.75m. Your speedometer indicates that you are traveling at a speed of 10.0 mph. a) What is the angular velocity of the engine in radians per second? b) What is the angular velocity of the tires in radians per second? c) What is the mechanical advantage of the gear you are in (the ratio of the engine speed to the tire speed)? 4. The tub of a washer goes into it’s spin-dry cycle, starting from rest and reaching an angular speed of 5.0 rev/s in 8.0 s. At this point, the person doing the laundry opens the lid, and a safety switch turns off the washer. The tub slows to rest in 12.0 s. Through how many revolutions does the tub turn during the entire 20-s interval? Assume constant angular acceleration while it is starting and stopping. 5. A coin with a diameter of 2.40 cm is dropped on edge onto a horizontal surface. The coin starts out with an initial angular speed of 18.0 rad/s and rolls in a straight line without slipping. If the rotation slows with an angular acceleration of magnitude 1.90 rad/s2, how far does the coin roll before coming to rest?Neglecting all resis- 8. The moon revolves around Earth in 29.5 days in a nearly circular orbit. The radius of the orbit is 3.8 x 105 km. What is the acceleration of the moon? 9. (a) What is the tangential acceleration of a bug on the rim of a 10-in.-diameter disk if the disk moves from rest to an angular speed of 78 rev/min in 3.0 s? (b) When the disk is at its final speed, what is the tangential velocity of the bug? (c) One second after the bug starts from rest, what are its tangential acceleration, centripetal acceleration, and total acceleration? 10. A 50.0-kg child stands at the rim of a merrygo-round of radius 2.00 m, rotating with an angular speed of 3.00 rad/s. (a) What is the child’s centripetal acceleration? (b) What is the minimum force between her feet and the floor of the carousel that is required to keep her in the circular path? (c) What minimum coefficient of static friction is required? Is the answer you found reasonable? In other words, is she likely to stay on the merry-go-round? 11. An engineer wishes to design a curved exit ramp for a toll road in such a way that a car will not have to rely on friction to round the curve without skidding. He does so by banking the road in such a way that the force causing the centripetal acceleration will be supplied by the component of the normal force toward the center of the circular path. (a) Show that, for a given speed v and a radius r, the curve must be banked at the angle θ such that tan θ = v2/rg. (b) Find the angle at which the curve should be banked if a typical car rounds it at a 50.0-m radius and a speed of 13.4 m/s. 12. An air puck of mass 0.25 kg is tied to a string and allowed to revolve in a circle of radius 1.0 m on a frictionless horizontal table. The other end of the string passes through a hole in the center of the table, and a mass of 1.0 kg is tied to it. The suspended mass remains in equilibrium while the puck on the tabletop revolves. (a) What is the tension in the string? (b) What is the horizontal force acting on the puck? (c) What is the speed of the puck? 13. A roller-coaster vehicle has a mass of 500 kg when fully loaded with passengers as shown in the picture. (a) If the vehicle has a speed of 20.0 m/s at point A, what is the force of the track on the vehicle at this point? (b) What is the maximum speed the vehicle can have at point B in order for gravity to hold it on the track? 14. One method of pitching a softball is called the “windmill” delivery method, in which the pitcher’s arm rotates through approximately 360° in a vertical plane before the 198-gram ball is released at the lowest point of the circular motion. An experienced pitcher can throw a ball with a speed of 98.0 mi/h. Assume that the angular acceleration is uniform throughout the pitching motion, and take the distance between the softball and the shoulder joint to be 74.2 cm. (a) Determine the angular speed of the arm in rev/s at the instant of release. (b) Find the value of the angular acceleration in rev/s2 and the radial and tangential acceleration of the ball just before it is released. (c) Determine the force exerted on the ball by the pitcher’s hand (both radial and tangential components) just before it is released. 15. In a popular amusement park ride, a rotating cylinder of radius 3.00 m is set in rotation at an angular speed of 5.00 rad/s. The floor then drops away, leaving the riders suspended against the wall in a vertical position. What minimum coefficient of friction between a rider’s clothing and the wall is needed to keep the rider from slipping? (Hint: Recall that the magnitude of the maximum force of static friction is equal to μn, where n is the normal force—in this case, the force causing the centripetal acceleration.) 16. A massless spring of constant k = 78.4 N/m is fixed on the left side of a level track. A block of mass m = 0.50 kg is pressed against the spring and compresses it a distance d, as shown below. The block (initially at rest) is then released and travels toward a circular loop-the-loop of radius R = 1.5 m. The entire track and the loop-theloop are frictionless, except for the section of track between points A and B. Given that the coefficient of kinetic friction between the block and the track along AB is μk = 0.30, and that the length of AB is 2.5 m, determine the minimum compression d of the spring that enables the block to just make it through the loop-the-loop at point C. (Hint: The force exerted by the track on the block will be zero if the block barely makes it through the loop-the-loop.)