Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Uniform Circular Motion Chapter 5 Expectations After Chapter 5, students will: understand that an object in circular motion continually accelerates, even though its speed may not change. understand very firmly that an object moving along a curved path is not in equilibrium. never again use an obscenity like “centrifugal force.” perform calculations involving the relationships among centripetal force, centripetal acceleration, speed, and path radius. Expectations After Chapter 5, students will: use angular velocity, period, and radian angle measures to solve problems. analyze situations in which centripetal forces are frictional or gravitational in nature. solve problems involving circular motion in a vertical plane. Uniform Circular Motion If an object travels on a circular path, and its speed is constant, it is performing uniform circular motion. v In one complete journey around its circular path, its angular displacement is 2p radians. 2pr T v r Radian Angle Measurement The radian measure of an angle is the length of the arc it subtends, divided by the radius: S r or S r Thus, the radian (rad) is the unitless ratio of two lengths. A circle contains 2p of them. r S Angular Velocity Average angular velocity is the angular displacement divided by the time interval in which it occurred. x vt x r (small ) vt r v t r r x v Angular Velocity The units of angular velocity are: t rad s The radian, however, is not a “real” unit, in the sense that it is dimensionless. So angular velocity has the dimensions of reciprocal time. Angular velocity can also be expressed in terms of other units: degrees/s, revolutions/min, etc. Centripetal Acceleration The velocity of an object in uniform circular motion is always changing. The magnitude of the velocity (speed) is constant ... but the direction of the velocity changes continually. If the direction of the velocity were constant, the object would move in a straight line, not in a circular path. Centripetal Acceleration Centripetal: “center-seeking” small - angle : v vt v vt aC v t t v but so r 2 v v aC v r r SI units: m/s2 v1 t v0 v t v0 v1 Centripetal Force To produce a centripetal acceleration requires a centripetal force, according to Newton’s second law: v 2 mv2 FC maC m r r Please keep in mind that the object moving in a circular path is not in equilibrium. A net force acts on it: the centripetal force. There is no offsetting “centrifugal” force. There is no “centrifugal” force at all. None. Never has been; never will be. Centripetal Force Where do centripetal forces come from? Gravitational (a moon orbiting a planet) Frictional (a race car going around a flat curve) Tension (a stone whirled on a string) Normal (clothing in a washing machine during its spin cycle) Electrical (electrons orbiting an atomic nucleus) Combinations (a race car going around a banked turn – frictional and normal) Gravitational Centripetal Force 2 For objects orbiting the Earth: mv mM E FC G 2 r r This equation can be solved for various things: v GM E r r 2pr noting that v , T 4p 2 r 3 T GM E and GM E v2 orbital period 2 T GM E 3 r 4p 2 Frictional Centripetal Force A car travels around a turn of radius r. The centripetal force required for the turn is provided by the static frictional force: mv2 FC S N r N mg (vertical equilibriu m), so mv2 S mg r N FC INDIANA 314159 mg Frictionless Banked Turn If the turn is banked by an angle and there is no friction: N N cos mg (vertical equilibriu m) mg N cos 2 mv mg sin FC N sin r cos v2 be solved for a g tan (can desired quantity) r N cos N sin A IAN IND 159 314 mg Banked Turn With Friction If there is friction, the situation becomes more complicated. The car does not accelerate in the N N cos Y direction, so: Fy 0 N cos mg FS sin N sin but FS S N , so N cos S N sin mg mg N cos S sin FS cos A IAN IND 159 4 31 FS sin FS mg Banked Turn With Friction In the X direction, the car does accelerate. mv2 Fx r FS cos N sin again, FS S N and N N cos N sin mg N . Substituti ng : cos S sin g S cos sin v 2 cos S sin r which can be solved for any of several quantities . FS cos A IAN IND 159 4 31 FS sin FS mg Circular Motion in a Vertical Plane Depending on location, the weight force provides none, some, or all of the centripetal force. 2 N3 mv3 N 3 mg r mg N2 r mg N1 mv1 N1 mg r 2 mg mv2 N2 r 2