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Centripetal force

A centripetal force (from Latin centrum, "center" and petere, "to seek"[1]) is a force that makes a body follow a curved path. The direction of the centripetal force is always orthogonal to the motion of the body and towards the fixed point of the instantaneous center of curvature of the path. Isaac Newton described it as "a force by which bodies are drawn or impelled, or in any way tend, towards a point as to a centre".[2] In the theory of Newtonian mechanics, gravity provides the centripetal force causing astronomical orbits.

One common example involving centripetal force is the case in which a body moves with uniform speed along a circular path. The centripetal force is directed at right angles to the motion and also along the radius towards the centre of the circular path.[3][4] The mathematical description was derived in 1659 by the Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens.[5]

Formula

 

The magnitude of the centripetal force on an object of mass m moving at tangential speed v along a path with radius of curvature r is:[6]

 
 
where   is the centripetal acceleration and   is the difference between the velocity vectors. Since the velocity vectors in the above diagram have constant magnitude and since each one is perpendicular to its respective position vector, simple vector subtraction implies two similar isosceles triangles with congruent angles – one comprising a base of   and a leg length of  , and the other a base of   (position vector difference) and a leg length of  :[7]
 
 
Therefore,   can be substituted with  :[7]
 
The direction of the force is toward the center of the circle in which the object is moving, or the osculating circle (the circle that best fits the local path of the object, if the path is not circular).[8] The speed in the formula is squared, so twice the speed needs four times the force, at a given radius.

This force is also sometimes written in terms of the angular velocity ω of the object about the center of the circle, related to the tangential velocity by the formula

 
so that
 

Expressed using the orbital period T for one revolution of the circle,

 
the equation becomes[9]
 

In particle accelerators, velocity can be very high (close to the speed of light in vacuum) so the same rest mass now exerts greater inertia (relativistic mass) thereby requiring greater force for the same centripetal acceleration, so the equation becomes:[10]

 
where
 
is the Lorentz factor.

Thus the centripetal force is given by:

 
which is the rate of change of relativistic momentum  .

Sources

 
A body experiencing uniform circular motion requires a centripetal force, towards the axis as shown, to maintain its circular path.

In the case of an object that is swinging around on the end of a rope in a horizontal plane, the centripetal force on the object is supplied by the tension of the rope. The rope example is an example involving a 'pull' force. The centripetal force can also be supplied as a 'push' force, such as in the case where the normal reaction of a wall supplies the centripetal force for a wall of death or a Rotor rider.

Newton's idea of a centripetal force corresponds to what is nowadays referred to as a central force. When a satellite is in orbit around a planet, gravity is considered to be a centripetal force even though in the case of eccentric orbits, the gravitational force is directed towards the focus, and not towards the instantaneous center of curvature.[11]

Another example of centripetal force arises in the helix that is traced out when a charged particle moves in a uniform magnetic field in the absence of other external forces. In this case, the magnetic force is the centripetal force that acts towards the helix axis.

Analysis of several cases

Below are three examples of increasing complexity, with derivations of the formulas governing velocity and acceleration.

Uniform circular motion

Uniform circular motion refers to the case of constant rate of rotation. Here are two approaches to describing this case.

Calculus derivation

In two dimensions, the position vector  , which has magnitude (length)   and directed at an angle   above the x-axis, can be expressed in Cartesian coordinates using the unit vectors   and  :[12]

 

The assumption of uniform circular motion requires three things:

  1. The object moves only on a circle.
  2. The radius of the circle   does not change in time.
  3. The object moves with constant angular velocity   around the circle. Therefore,   where   is time.

The velocity   and acceleration   of the motion are the first and second derivatives of position with respect to time:

 
 
 

The term in parenthesis is the original expression of   in Cartesian coordinates. Consequently,

 
negative shows that the acceleration is pointed towards the center of the circle (opposite the radius), hence it is called "centripetal" (i.e. "center-seeking"). While objects naturally follow a straight path (due to inertia), this centripetal acceleration describes the circular motion path caused by a centripetal force.

Derivation using vectors

 
Vector relationships for uniform circular motion; vector Ω representing the rotation is normal to the plane of the orbit with polarity determined by the right-hand rule and magnitude /dt.

The image at right shows the vector relationships for uniform circular motion. The rotation itself is represented by the angular velocity vector Ω, which is normal to the plane of the orbit (using the right-hand rule) and has magnitude given by:

 

with θ the angular position at time t. In this subsection, dθ/dt is assumed constant, independent of time. The distance traveled dℓ of the particle in time dt along the circular path is

 

which, by properties of the vector cross product, has magnitude rdθ and is in the direction tangent to the circular path.

Consequently,

 

In other words,

 

Differentiating with respect to time,

 

Lagrange's formula states:

 

Applying Lagrange's formula with the observation that Ω • r(t) = 0 at all times,

 

In words, the acceleration is pointing directly opposite to the radial displacement r at all times, and has a magnitude:

 
where vertical bars |...| denote the vector magnitude, which in the case of r(t) is simply the radius r of the path. This result agrees with the previous section, though the notation is slightly different.

When the rate of rotation is made constant in the analysis of nonuniform circular motion, that analysis agrees with this one.

A merit of the vector approach is that it is manifestly independent of any coordinate system.

Example: The banked turn

 
Upper panel: Ball on a banked circular track moving with constant speed v; Lower panel: Forces on the ball

The upper panel in the image at right shows a ball in circular motion on a banked curve. The curve is banked at an angle θ from the horizontal, and the surface of the road is considered to be slippery. The objective is to find what angle the bank must have so the ball does not slide off the road.[13] Intuition tells us that, on a flat curve with no banking at all, the ball will simply slide off the road; while with a very steep banking, the ball will slide to the center unless it travels the curve rapidly.

Apart from any acceleration that might occur in the direction of the path, the lower panel of the image above indicates the forces on the ball. There are two forces; one is the force of gravity vertically downward through the center of mass of the ball mg, where m is the mass of the ball and g is the gravitational acceleration; the second is the upward normal force exerted by the road at a right angle to the road surface man. The centripetal force demanded by the curved motion is also shown above. This centripetal force is not a third force applied to the ball, but rather must be provided by the net force on the ball resulting from vector addition of the normal force and the force of gravity. The resultant or net force on the ball found by vector addition of the normal force exerted by the road and vertical force due to gravity must equal the centripetal force dictated by the need to travel a circular path. The curved motion is maintained so long as this net force provides the centripetal force requisite to the motion.

The horizontal net force on the ball is the horizontal component of the force from the road, which has magnitude |Fh| = m|an| sin θ. The vertical component of the force from the road must counteract the gravitational force: |Fv| = m|an| cos θ = m|g|, which implies |an| = |g| / cos θ. Substituting into the above formula for |Fh| yields a horizontal force to be:

 

On the other hand, at velocity |v| on a circular path of radius r, kinematics says that the force needed to turn the ball continuously into the turn is the radially inward centripetal force Fc of magnitude:

 

Consequently, the ball is in a stable path when the angle of the road is set to satisfy the condition:

 
or,
 

As the angle of bank θ approaches 90°, the tangent function approaches infinity, allowing larger values for |v|2/r. In words, this equation states that for greater speeds (bigger |v|) the road must be banked more steeply (a larger value for θ), and for sharper turns (smaller r) the road also must be banked more steeply, which accords with intuition. When the angle θ does not satisfy the above condition, the horizontal component of force exerted by the road does not provide the correct centripetal force, and an additional frictional force tangential to the road surface is called upon to provide the difference. If friction cannot do this (that is, the coefficient of friction is exceeded), the ball slides to a different radius where the balance can be realized.[14][15]

These ideas apply to air flight as well. See the FAA pilot's manual.[16]

Nonuniform circular motion

 
/ R.

As a generalization of the uniform circular motion case, suppose the angular rate of rotation is not constant. The acceleration now has a tangential component, as shown the image at right. This case is used to demonstrate a derivation strategy based on a polar coordinate system.

Let r(t) be a vector that describes the position of a point mass as a function of time. Since we are assuming circular motion, let r(t) = R·ur, where R is a constant (the radius of the circle) and ur is the unit vector pointing from the origin to the point mass. The direction of ur is described by θ, the angle between the x-axis and the unit vector, measured counterclockwise from the x-axis. The other unit vector for polar coordinates, uθ is perpendicular to ur and points in the direction of increasing θ. These polar unit vectors can be expressed in terms of Cartesian unit vectors in the x and y directions, denoted   and   respectively:[17]

 
and
 

One can differentiate to find velocity:

 
where ω is the angular velocity /dt.

This result for the velocity matches expectations that the velocity should be directed tangentially to the circle, and that the magnitude of the velocity should be . Differentiating again, and noting that

 
we find that the acceleration, a is:
 

Thus, the radial and tangential components of the acceleration are:

 
and
 
where |v| = r ω is the magnitude of the velocity (the speed).

These equations express mathematically that, in the case of an object that moves along a circular path with a changing speed, the acceleration of the body may be decomposed into a perpendicular component that changes the direction of motion (the centripetal acceleration), and a parallel, or tangential component, that changes the speed.

General planar motion

 
Position vector r, always points radially from the origin.
 
Velocity vector v, always tangent to the path of motion.
 
Acceleration vector a, not parallel to the radial motion but offset by the angular and Coriolis accelerations, nor tangent to the path but offset by the centripetal and radial accelerations.
Kinematic vectors in plane polar coordinates. Notice the setup is not restricted to 2d space, but a plane in any higher dimension.
 
Polar unit vectors at two times t and t + dt for a particle with trajectory r ( t ); on the left the unit vectors uρ and uθ at the two times are moved so their tails all meet, and are shown to trace an arc of a unit radius circle. Their rotation in time dt is dθ, just the same angle as the rotation of the trajectory r ( t ).

Polar coordinates

The above results can be derived perhaps more simply in polar coordinates, and at the same time extended to general motion within a plane, as shown next. Polar coordinates in the plane employ a radial unit vector uρ and an angular unit vector uθ, as shown above.[18] A particle at position r is described by:

 

where the notation ρ is used to describe the distance of the path from the origin instead of R to emphasize that this distance is not fixed, but varies with time. The unit vector uρ travels with the particle and always points in the same direction as r(t). Unit vector uθ also travels with the particle and stays orthogonal to uρ. Thus, uρ and uθ form a local Cartesian coordinate system attached to the particle, and tied to the path traveled by the particle.[19] By moving the unit vectors so their tails coincide, as seen in the circle at the left of the image above, it is seen that uρ and uθ form a right-angled pair with tips on the unit circle that trace back and forth on the perimeter of this circle with the same angle θ(t) as r(t).

When the particle moves, its velocity is

 

To evaluate the velocity, the derivative of the unit vector uρ is needed. Because uρ is a unit vector, its magnitude is fixed, and it can change only in direction, that is, its change duρ has a component only perpendicular to uρ. When the trajectory r(t) rotates an amount dθ, uρ, which points in the same direction as r(t), also rotates by dθ. See image above. Therefore, the change in uρ is

 

or

 

In a similar fashion, the rate of change of uθ is found. As with uρ, uθ is a unit vector and can only rotate without changing size. To remain orthogonal to uρ while the trajectory r(t) rotates an amount dθ, uθ, which is orthogonal to r(t), also rotates by dθ. See image above. Therefore, the change duθ is orthogonal to uθ and proportional to dθ (see image above):

 

The image above shows the sign to be negative: to maintain orthogonality, if duρ is positive with dθ, then duθ must decrease.

Substituting the derivative of uρ into the expression for velocity:

 

To obtain the acceleration, another time differentiation is done:

 

Substituting the derivatives of uρ and uθ, the acceleration of the particle is:[20]

 

As a particular example, if the particle moves in a circle of constant radius R, then dρ/dt = 0, v = vθ, and:

 

where  

These results agree with those above for nonuniform circular motion. See also the article on non-uniform circular motion. If this acceleration is multiplied by the particle mass, the leading term is the centripetal force and the negative of the second term related to angular acceleration is sometimes called the Euler force.[21]

For trajectories other than circular motion, for example, the more general trajectory envisioned in the image above, the instantaneous center of rotation and radius of curvature of the trajectory are related only indirectly to the coordinate system defined by uρ and uθ and to the length |r(t)| = ρ. Consequently, in the general case, it is not straightforward to disentangle the centripetal and Euler terms from the above general acceleration equation.[22][23] To deal directly with this issue, local coordinates are preferable, as discussed next.

Local coordinates

 
Local coordinate system for planar motion on a curve. Two different positions are shown for distances s and s + ds along the curve. At each position s, unit vector un points along the outward normal to the curve and unit vector ut is tangential to the path. The radius of curvature of the path is ρ as found from the rate of rotation of the tangent to the curve with respect to arc length, and is the radius of the osculating circle at position s. The unit circle on the left shows the rotation of the unit vectors with s.

Local coordinates mean a set of coordinates that travel with the particle,[24] and have orientation determined by the path of the particle.[25] Unit vectors are formed as shown in the image at right, both tangential and normal to the path. This coordinate system sometimes is referred to as intrinsic or path coordinates[26][27] or nt-coordinates, for normal-tangential, referring to these unit vectors. These coordinates are a very special example of a more general concept of local coordinates from the theory of differential forms.[28]

Distance along the path of the particle is the arc length s, considered to be a known function of time.

 

A center of curvature is defined at each position s located a distance ρ (the radius of curvature) from the curve on a line along the normal un (s). The required distance ρ(s) at arc length s is defined in terms of the rate of rotation of the tangent to the curve, which in turn is determined by the path itself. If the orientation of the tangent relative to some starting position is θ(s), then ρ(s) is defined by the derivative dθ/ds:

 

The radius of curvature usually is taken as positive (that is, as an absolute value), while the curvature κ is a signed quantity.

A geometric approach to finding the center of curvature and the radius of curvature uses a limiting process leading to the osculating circle.[29][30] See image above.

Using these coordinates, the motion along the path is viewed as a succession of circular paths of ever-changing center, and at each position s constitutes non-uniform circular motion at that position with radius ρ. The local value of the angular rate of rotation then is given by:

 

with the local speed v given by:

 

As for the other examples above, because unit vectors cannot change magnitude, their rate of change is always perpendicular to their direction (see the left-hand insert in the image above):[31]

   

Consequently, the velocity and acceleration are:[30][32][33]

 

and using the chain-rule of differentiation:

  with the tangential acceleration  

In this local coordinate system, the acceleration resembles the expression for nonuniform circular motion with the local radius ρ(s), and the centripetal acceleration is identified as the second term.[34]

Extending this approach to three dimensional space curves leads to the Frenet–Serret formulas.[35][36]

Alternative approach

Looking at the image above, one might wonder whether adequate account has been taken of the difference in curvature between ρ(s) and ρ(s + ds) in computing the arc length as ds = ρ(s)dθ. Reassurance on this point can be found using a more formal approach outlined below. This approach also makes connection with the article on curvature.

To introduce the unit vectors of the local coordinate system, one approach is to begin in Cartesian coordinates and describe the local coordinates in terms of these Cartesian coordinates. In terms of arc length s, let the path be described as:[37]

 

Then an incremental displacement along the path ds is described by:

 

where primes are introduced to denote derivatives with respect to s. The magnitude of this displacement is ds, showing that:[38]

  (Eq. 1)

This displacement is necessarily a tangent to the curve at s, showing that the unit vector tangent to the curve is:

 
while the outward unit vector normal to the curve is
 

Orthogonality can be verified by showing that the vector dot product is zero. The unit magnitude of these vectors is a consequence of Eq. 1. Using the tangent vector, the angle θ of the tangent to the curve is given by:

 
and  

The radius of curvature is introduced completely formally (without need for geometric interpretation) as:

 

The derivative of θ can be found from that for sinθ:

 

Now:

 
in which the denominator is unity. With this formula for the derivative of the sine, the radius of curvature becomes:
 
where the equivalence of the forms stems from differentiation of Eq. 1:
 
With these results, the acceleration can be found:
 
as can be verified by taking the dot product with the unit vectors ut(s) and un(s). This result for acceleration is the same as that for circular motion based on the radius ρ. Using this coordinate system in the inertial frame, it is easy to identify the force normal to the trajectory as the centripetal force and that parallel to the trajectory as the tangential force. From a qualitative standpoint, the path can be approximated by an arc of a circle for a limited time, and for the limited time a particular radius of curvature applies, the centrifugal and Euler forces can be analyzed on the basis of circular motion with that radius.

This result for acceleration agrees with that found earlier. However, in this approach, the question of the change in radius of curvature with s is handled completely formally, consistent with a geometric interpretation, but not relying upon it, thereby avoiding any questions the image above might suggest about neglecting the variation in ρ.

Example: circular motion

To illustrate the above formulas, let x, y be given as:

 

Then:

 

which can be recognized as a circular path around the origin with radius α. The position s = 0 corresponds to [α, 0], or 3 o'clock. To use the above formalism, the derivatives are needed:

 
 

With these results, one can verify that:

 

The unit vectors can also be found:

 

which serve to show that s = 0 is located at position [ρ, 0] and s = ρπ/2 at [0, ρ], which agrees with the original expressions for x and y. In other words, s is measured counterclockwise around the circle from 3 o'clock. Also, the derivatives of these vectors can be found:

 
 

To obtain velocity and acceleration, a time-dependence for s is necessary. For counterclockwise motion at variable speed v(t):

 

where v(t) is the speed and t is time, and s(t = 0) = 0. Then:

 
 
 

where it already is established that α = ρ. This acceleration is the standard result for non-uniform circular motion.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Craig, John (1849). A new universal etymological, technological and pronouncing dictionary of the English language: embracing all terms used in art, science, and literature, Volume 1. Harvard University. p. 291. Extract of page 291
  2. ^ Newton, Isaac (2010). The principia : mathematical principles of natural philosophy. [S.l.]: Snowball Pub. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-60796-240-3.
  3. ^ Russelkl C Hibbeler (2009). "Equations of Motion: Normal and tangential coordinates". Engineering Mechanics: Dynamics (12 ed.). Prentice Hall. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-13-607791-6.
  4. ^ Paul Allen Tipler; Gene Mosca (2003). Physics for scientists and engineers (5th ed.). Macmillan. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-7167-8339-8.
  5. ^ P. Germain; M. Piau; D. Caillerie, eds. (2012). Theoretical and Applied Mechanics. Elsevier. ISBN 9780444600202.
  6. ^ Chris Carter (2001). Facts and Practice for A-Level: Physics. S.2.: Oxford University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-19-914768-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  7. ^ a b OpenStax CNX. "Uniform Circular Motion".
  8. ^ Eugene Lommel; George William Myers (1900). Experimental physics. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. p. 63.
  9. ^ Colwell, Catharine H. . PhysicsLAB. Archived from the original on 15 August 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  10. ^ Conte, Mario; Mackay, William W (1991). An Introduction to the Physics of Particle Accelerators. World Scientific. p. 8. ISBN 978-981-4518-00-0. Extract of page 8
  11. ^ Theo Koupelis (2010). In Quest of the Universe (6th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-7637-6858-4.
  12. ^ A. V. Durrant (1996). Vectors in physics and engineering. CRC Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-412-62710-1.
  13. ^ Lawrence S. Lerner (1997). Physics for Scientists and Engineers. Boston: Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-86720-479-7.
  14. ^ Arthur Beiser (2004). Schaum's Outline of Applied Physics. New York: McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-07-142611-4.
  15. ^ Alan Darbyshire (2003). Mechanical Engineering: BTEC National Option Units. Oxford: Newnes. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-7506-5761-7.
  16. ^ Federal Aviation Administration (2007). Pilot's Encyclopedia of Aeronautical Knowledge. Oklahoma City OK: Skyhorse Publishing Inc. Figure 3–21. ISBN 978-1-60239-034-8.
  17. ^ Note: unlike the Cartesian unit vectors   and  , which are constant, in polar coordinates the direction of the unit vectors ur and uθ depend on θ, and so in general have non-zero time derivatives.
  18. ^ Although the polar coordinate system moves with the particle, the observer does not. The description of the particle motion remains a description from the stationary observer's point of view.
  19. ^ Notice that this local coordinate system is not autonomous; for example, its rotation in time is dictated by the trajectory traced by the particle. The radial vector r(t) does not represent the radius of curvature of the path.
  20. ^ John Robert Taylor (2005). Classical Mechanics. Sausalito CA: University Science Books. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-1-891389-22-1.
  21. ^ Cornelius Lanczos (1986). The Variational Principles of Mechanics. New York: Courier Dover Publications. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-486-65067-8.
  22. ^ See, for example, Howard D. Curtis (2005). Orbital Mechanics for Engineering Students. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-7506-6169-0.
  23. ^ S. Y. Lee (2004). Accelerator physics (2nd ed.). Hackensack NJ: World Scientific. p. 37. ISBN 978-981-256-182-4.
  24. ^ The observer of the motion along the curve is using these local coordinates to describe the motion from the observer's frame of reference, that is, from a stationary point of view. In other words, although the local coordinate system moves with the particle, the observer does not. A change in coordinate system used by the observer is only a change in their description of observations, and does not mean that the observer has changed their state of motion, and vice versa.
  25. ^ Zhilin Li; Kazufumi Ito (2006). The immersed interface method: numerical solutions of PDEs involving interfaces and irregular domains. Philadelphia: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-89871-609-2.
  26. ^ K L Kumar (2003). Engineering Mechanics. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. p. 339. ISBN 978-0-07-049473-2.
  27. ^ Lakshmana C. Rao; J. Lakshminarasimhan; Raju Sethuraman; SM Sivakuma (2004). Engineering Dynamics: Statics and Dynamics. Prentice Hall of India. p. 133. ISBN 978-81-203-2189-2.
  28. ^ Shigeyuki Morita (2001). Geometry of Differential Forms. American Mathematical Society. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-8218-1045-3. local coordinates.
  29. ^ The osculating circle at a given point P on a curve is the limiting circle of a sequence of circles that pass through P and two other points on the curve, Q and R, on either side of P, as Q and R approach P. See the online text by Lamb: Horace Lamb (1897). An Elementary Course of Infinitesimal Calculus. University Press. p. 406. ISBN 978-1-108-00534-0. osculating circle.
  30. ^ a b Guang Chen; Fook Fah Yap (2003). An Introduction to Planar Dynamics (3rd ed.). Central Learning Asia/Thomson Learning Asia. p. 34. ISBN 978-981-243-568-2.
  31. ^ R. Douglas Gregory (2006). Classical Mechanics: An Undergraduate Text. Cambridge University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-521-82678-5.
  32. ^ Edmund Taylor Whittaker; William McCrea (1988). A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies: with an introduction to the problem of three bodies (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-521-35883-5.
  33. ^ Jerry H. Ginsberg (2007). Engineering Dynamics. Cambridge University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-521-88303-0.
  34. ^ Joseph F. Shelley (1990). 800 solved problems in vector mechanics for engineers: Dynamics. McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-07-056687-3.
  35. ^ Larry C. Andrews; Ronald L. Phillips (2003). Mathematical Techniques for Engineers and Scientists. SPIE Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-8194-4506-3.
  36. ^ Ch V Ramana Murthy; NC Srinivas (2001). Applied Mathematics. New Delhi: S. Chand & Co. p. 337. ISBN 978-81-219-2082-7.
  37. ^ The article on curvature treats a more general case where the curve is parametrized by an arbitrary variable (denoted t), rather than by the arc length s.
  38. ^ Ahmed A. Shabana; Khaled E. Zaazaa; Hiroyuki Sugiyama (2007). Railroad Vehicle Dynamics: A Computational Approach. CRC Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-1-4200-4581-9.

Further reading

  • Serway, Raymond A.; Jewett, John W. (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers (6th ed.). Brooks/Cole. ISBN 978-0-534-40842-8.
  • Tipler, Paul (2004). Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Mechanics, Oscillations and Waves, Thermodynamics (5th ed.). W. H. Freeman. ISBN 978-0-7167-0809-4.
  • vs. , from an online Regents Exam physics tutorial by the Oswego City School District

External links

  • Notes from Physics and Astronomy HyperPhysics at Georgia State University

centripetal, force, confused, with, centrifugal, force, other, meanings, centripetal, centripetal, disambiguation, centripetal, force, from, latin, centrum, center, petere, seek, force, that, makes, body, follow, curved, path, direction, centripetal, force, al. Not to be confused with Centrifugal force For other meanings of centripetal see Centripetal disambiguation A centripetal force from Latin centrum center and petere to seek 1 is a force that makes a body follow a curved path The direction of the centripetal force is always orthogonal to the motion of the body and towards the fixed point of the instantaneous center of curvature of the path Isaac Newton described it as a force by which bodies are drawn or impelled or in any way tend towards a point as to a centre 2 In the theory of Newtonian mechanics gravity provides the centripetal force causing astronomical orbits One common example involving centripetal force is the case in which a body moves with uniform speed along a circular path The centripetal force is directed at right angles to the motion and also along the radius towards the centre of the circular path 3 4 The mathematical description was derived in 1659 by the Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens 5 Contents 1 Formula 2 Sources 3 Analysis of several cases 3 1 Uniform circular motion 3 1 1 Calculus derivation 3 1 2 Derivation using vectors 3 1 3 Example The banked turn 3 2 Nonuniform circular motion 3 3 General planar motion 3 3 1 Polar coordinates 3 3 2 Local coordinates 3 3 2 1 Alternative approach 3 3 2 2 Example circular motion 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Further reading 7 External linksFormula Edit The magnitude of the centripetal force on an object of mass m moving at tangential speed v along a path with radius of curvature r is 6 F c m a c m v 2 r displaystyle F c ma c frac mv 2 r a c lim D t 0 D v D t displaystyle a c lim Delta t to 0 frac Delta textbf v Delta t where a c displaystyle a c is the centripetal acceleration and D v displaystyle Delta textbf v is the difference between the velocity vectors Since the velocity vectors in the above diagram have constant magnitude and since each one is perpendicular to its respective position vector simple vector subtraction implies two similar isosceles triangles with congruent angles one comprising a base of D v displaystyle Delta textbf v and a leg length of v displaystyle v and the other a base of D r displaystyle Delta textbf r position vector difference and a leg length of r displaystyle r 7 D v v D r r displaystyle frac Delta textbf v v frac Delta textbf r r D v v r D r displaystyle Delta textbf v frac v r Delta textbf r Therefore D v displaystyle Delta textbf v can be substituted with v r D r displaystyle frac v r Delta textbf r 7 a c lim D t 0 D v D t v r lim D t 0 D r D t w lim D t 0 D r D t v w v 2 r displaystyle a c lim Delta t to 0 frac Delta textbf v Delta t frac v r lim Delta t to 0 frac Delta textbf r Delta t omega lim Delta t to 0 frac Delta textbf r Delta t v omega frac v 2 r The direction of the force is toward the center of the circle in which the object is moving or the osculating circle the circle that best fits the local path of the object if the path is not circular 8 The speed in the formula is squared so twice the speed needs four times the force at a given radius This force is also sometimes written in terms of the angular velocity w of the object about the center of the circle related to the tangential velocity by the formulav w r displaystyle v omega r so that F c m r w 2 displaystyle F c mr omega 2 Expressed using the orbital period T for one revolution of the circle w 2 p T displaystyle omega frac 2 pi T the equation becomes 9 F c m r 2 p T 2 displaystyle F c mr left frac 2 pi T right 2 In particle accelerators velocity can be very high close to the speed of light in vacuum so the same rest mass now exerts greater inertia relativistic mass thereby requiring greater force for the same centripetal acceleration so the equation becomes 10 F c g m v 2 r displaystyle F c frac gamma mv 2 r where g 1 1 v 2 c 2 displaystyle gamma frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 is the Lorentz factor Thus the centripetal force is given by F c g m v w displaystyle F c gamma mv omega which is the rate of change of relativistic momentum g m v displaystyle gamma mv Sources Edit A body experiencing uniform circular motion requires a centripetal force towards the axis as shown to maintain its circular path In the case of an object that is swinging around on the end of a rope in a horizontal plane the centripetal force on the object is supplied by the tension of the rope The rope example is an example involving a pull force The centripetal force can also be supplied as a push force such as in the case where the normal reaction of a wall supplies the centripetal force for a wall of death or a Rotor rider Newton s idea of a centripetal force corresponds to what is nowadays referred to as a central force When a satellite is in orbit around a planet gravity is considered to be a centripetal force even though in the case of eccentric orbits the gravitational force is directed towards the focus and not towards the instantaneous center of curvature 11 Another example of centripetal force arises in the helix that is traced out when a charged particle moves in a uniform magnetic field in the absence of other external forces In this case the magnetic force is the centripetal force that acts towards the helix axis Analysis of several cases EditBelow are three examples of increasing complexity with derivations of the formulas governing velocity and acceleration Uniform circular motion Edit See also Uniform circular motion Uniform circular motion refers to the case of constant rate of rotation Here are two approaches to describing this case Calculus derivation Edit In two dimensions the position vector r displaystyle textbf r which has magnitude length r displaystyle r and directed at an angle 8 displaystyle theta above the x axis can be expressed in Cartesian coordinates using the unit vectors i displaystyle hat mathbf i and j displaystyle hat mathbf j 12 r r cos 8 i r sin 8 j displaystyle textbf r r cos theta hat mathbf i r sin theta hat mathbf j The assumption of uniform circular motion requires three things The object moves only on a circle The radius of the circle r displaystyle r does not change in time The object moves with constant angular velocity w displaystyle omega around the circle Therefore 8 w t displaystyle theta omega t where t displaystyle t is time The velocity v displaystyle textbf v and acceleration a displaystyle textbf a of the motion are the first and second derivatives of position with respect to time r r cos w t i r sin w t j displaystyle textbf r r cos omega t hat mathbf i r sin omega t hat mathbf j v r r w sin w t i r w cos w t j displaystyle textbf v dot textbf r r omega sin omega t hat mathbf i r omega cos omega t hat mathbf j a r w 2 r cos w t i r sin w t j displaystyle textbf a ddot textbf r omega 2 r cos omega t hat mathbf i r sin omega t hat mathbf j The term in parenthesis is the original expression of r displaystyle textbf r in Cartesian coordinates Consequently a w 2 r displaystyle textbf a omega 2 textbf r negative shows that the acceleration is pointed towards the center of the circle opposite the radius hence it is called centripetal i e center seeking While objects naturally follow a straight path due to inertia this centripetal acceleration describes the circular motion path caused by a centripetal force Derivation using vectors Edit Vector relationships for uniform circular motion vector W representing the rotation is normal to the plane of the orbit with polarity determined by the right hand rule and magnitude d8 dt The image at right shows the vector relationships for uniform circular motion The rotation itself is represented by the angular velocity vector W which is normal to the plane of the orbit using the right hand rule and has magnitude given by W d 8 d t w displaystyle mathbf Omega frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t omega with 8 the angular position at time t In this subsection d8 dt is assumed constant independent of time The distance traveled dℓ of the particle in time dt along the circular path is d ℓ W r t d t displaystyle mathrm d boldsymbol ell mathbf Omega times mathbf r t mathrm d t which by properties of the vector cross product has magnitude rd8 and is in the direction tangent to the circular path Consequently d r d t lim D t 0 r t D t r t D t d ℓ d t displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d t lim Delta t to 0 frac mathbf r t Delta t mathbf r t Delta t frac mathrm d boldsymbol ell mathrm d t In other words v d e f d r d t d ℓ d t W r t displaystyle mathbf v stackrel mathrm def frac mathrm d mathbf r mathrm d t frac mathrm d mathbf boldsymbol ell mathrm d t mathbf Omega times mathbf r t Differentiating with respect to time a d e f d v d t W d r t d t W W r t displaystyle mathbf a stackrel mathrm def frac mathrm d mathbf v d mathrm t mathbf Omega times frac mathrm d mathbf r t mathrm d t mathbf Omega times left mathbf Omega times mathbf r t right Lagrange s formula states a b c b a c c a b displaystyle mathbf a times left mathbf b times mathbf c right mathbf b left mathbf a cdot mathbf c right mathbf c left mathbf a cdot mathbf b right Applying Lagrange s formula with the observation that W r t 0 at all times a W 2 r t displaystyle mathbf a mathbf Omega 2 mathbf r t In words the acceleration is pointing directly opposite to the radial displacement r at all times and has a magnitude a r t d 8 d t 2 r w 2 displaystyle mathbf a mathbf r t left frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t right 2 r omega 2 where vertical bars denote the vector magnitude which in the case of r t is simply the radius r of the path This result agrees with the previous section though the notation is slightly different When the rate of rotation is made constant in the analysis of nonuniform circular motion that analysis agrees with this one A merit of the vector approach is that it is manifestly independent of any coordinate system Example The banked turn Edit Main article Banked turn See also Reactive centrifugal force Upper panel Ball on a banked circular track moving with constant speed v Lower panel Forces on the ball The upper panel in the image at right shows a ball in circular motion on a banked curve The curve is banked at an angle 8 from the horizontal and the surface of the road is considered to be slippery The objective is to find what angle the bank must have so the ball does not slide off the road 13 Intuition tells us that on a flat curve with no banking at all the ball will simply slide off the road while with a very steep banking the ball will slide to the center unless it travels the curve rapidly Apart from any acceleration that might occur in the direction of the path the lower panel of the image above indicates the forces on the ball There are two forces one is the force of gravity vertically downward through the center of mass of the ball mg where m is the mass of the ball and g is the gravitational acceleration the second is the upward normal force exerted by the road at a right angle to the road surface man The centripetal force demanded by the curved motion is also shown above This centripetal force is not a third force applied to the ball but rather must be provided by the net force on the ball resulting from vector addition of the normal force and the force of gravity The resultant or net force on the ball found by vector addition of the normal force exerted by the road and vertical force due to gravity must equal the centripetal force dictated by the need to travel a circular path The curved motion is maintained so long as this net force provides the centripetal force requisite to the motion The horizontal net force on the ball is the horizontal component of the force from the road which has magnitude Fh m an sin 8 The vertical component of the force from the road must counteract the gravitational force Fv m an cos 8 m g which implies an g cos 8 Substituting into the above formula for Fh yields a horizontal force to be F h m g sin 8 cos 8 m g tan 8 displaystyle mathbf F mathrm h m mathbf g frac sin theta cos theta m mathbf g tan theta On the other hand at velocity v on a circular path of radius r kinematics says that the force needed to turn the ball continuously into the turn is the radially inward centripetal force Fc of magnitude F c m a c m v 2 r displaystyle mathbf F mathrm c m mathbf a mathrm c frac m mathbf v 2 r Consequently the ball is in a stable path when the angle of the road is set to satisfy the condition m g tan 8 m v 2 r displaystyle m mathbf g tan theta frac m mathbf v 2 r or tan 8 v 2 g r displaystyle tan theta frac mathbf v 2 mathbf g r As the angle of bank 8 approaches 90 the tangent function approaches infinity allowing larger values for v 2 r In words this equation states that for greater speeds bigger v the road must be banked more steeply a larger value for 8 and for sharper turns smaller r the road also must be banked more steeply which accords with intuition When the angle 8 does not satisfy the above condition the horizontal component of force exerted by the road does not provide the correct centripetal force and an additional frictional force tangential to the road surface is called upon to provide the difference If friction cannot do this that is the coefficient of friction is exceeded the ball slides to a different radius where the balance can be realized 14 15 These ideas apply to air flight as well See the FAA pilot s manual 16 Nonuniform circular motion Edit See also Circular motion and Non uniform circular motion R As a generalization of the uniform circular motion case suppose the angular rate of rotation is not constant The acceleration now has a tangential component as shown the image at right This case is used to demonstrate a derivation strategy based on a polar coordinate system Let r t be a vector that describes the position of a point mass as a function of time Since we are assuming circular motion let r t R ur where R is a constant the radius of the circle and ur is the unit vector pointing from the origin to the point mass The direction of ur is described by 8 the angle between the x axis and the unit vector measured counterclockwise from the x axis The other unit vector for polar coordinates u8 is perpendicular to ur and points in the direction of increasing 8 These polar unit vectors can be expressed in terms of Cartesian unit vectors in the x and y directions denoted i displaystyle hat mathbf i and j displaystyle hat mathbf j respectively 17 u r cos 8 i sin 8 j displaystyle mathbf u r cos theta hat mathbf i sin theta hat mathbf j and u 8 sin 8 i cos 8 j displaystyle mathbf u theta sin theta hat mathbf i cos theta hat mathbf j One can differentiate to find velocity v r d u r d t r d d t cos 8 i sin 8 j r d 8 d t d d 8 cos 8 i sin 8 j r d 8 d t sin 8 i cos 8 j r d 8 d t u 8 w r u 8 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf v amp r frac d mathbf u r dt amp r frac d dt left cos theta hat mathbf i sin theta hat mathbf j right amp r frac d theta dt frac d d theta left cos theta hat mathbf i sin theta hat mathbf j right amp r frac d theta dt left sin theta hat mathbf i cos theta hat mathbf j right amp r frac d theta dt mathbf u theta amp omega r mathbf u theta end aligned where w is the angular velocity d8 dt This result for the velocity matches expectations that the velocity should be directed tangentially to the circle and that the magnitude of the velocity should be rw Differentiating again and noting thatd u 8 d t d 8 d t u r w u r displaystyle frac d mathbf u theta dt frac d theta dt mathbf u r omega mathbf u r we find that the acceleration a is a r d w d t u 8 w 2 u r displaystyle mathbf a r left frac d omega dt mathbf u theta omega 2 mathbf u r right Thus the radial and tangential components of the acceleration are a r w 2 r u r v 2 r u r displaystyle mathbf a r omega 2 r mathbf u r frac mathbf v 2 r mathbf u r and a 8 r d w d t u 8 d v d t u 8 displaystyle mathbf a theta r frac d omega dt mathbf u theta frac d mathbf v dt mathbf u theta where v r w is the magnitude of the velocity the speed These equations express mathematically that in the case of an object that moves along a circular path with a changing speed the acceleration of the body may be decomposed into a perpendicular component that changes the direction of motion the centripetal acceleration and a parallel or tangential component that changes the speed General planar motion Edit See also Generalized forces Generalized force Curvilinear coordinates Generalized coordinates and Orthogonal coordinates Position vector r always points radially from the origin Velocity vector v always tangent to the path of motion Acceleration vector a not parallel to the radial motion but offset by the angular and Coriolis accelerations nor tangent to the path but offset by the centripetal and radial accelerations Kinematic vectors in plane polar coordinates Notice the setup is not restricted to 2d space but a plane in any higher dimension Polar unit vectors at two times t and t dt for a particle with trajectory r t on the left the unit vectors ur and u8 at the two times are moved so their tails all meet and are shown to trace an arc of a unit radius circle Their rotation in time dt is d8 just the same angle as the rotation of the trajectory r t Polar coordinates Edit The above results can be derived perhaps more simply in polar coordinates and at the same time extended to general motion within a plane as shown next Polar coordinates in the plane employ a radial unit vector ur and an angular unit vector u8 as shown above 18 A particle at position r is described by r r u r displaystyle mathbf r rho mathbf u rho where the notation r is used to describe the distance of the path from the origin instead of R to emphasize that this distance is not fixed but varies with time The unit vector ur travels with the particle and always points in the same direction as r t Unit vector u8 also travels with the particle and stays orthogonal to ur Thus ur and u8 form a local Cartesian coordinate system attached to the particle and tied to the path traveled by the particle 19 By moving the unit vectors so their tails coincide as seen in the circle at the left of the image above it is seen that ur and u8 form a right angled pair with tips on the unit circle that trace back and forth on the perimeter of this circle with the same angle 8 t as r t When the particle moves its velocity is v d r d t u r r d u r d t displaystyle mathbf v frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t mathbf u rho rho frac mathrm d mathbf u rho mathrm d t To evaluate the velocity the derivative of the unit vector ur is needed Because ur is a unit vector its magnitude is fixed and it can change only in direction that is its change dur has a component only perpendicular to ur When the trajectory r t rotates an amount d8 ur which points in the same direction as r t also rotates by d8 See image above Therefore the change in ur is d u r u 8 d 8 displaystyle mathrm d mathbf u rho mathbf u theta mathrm d theta or d u r d t u 8 d 8 d t displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf u rho mathrm d t mathbf u theta frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t In a similar fashion the rate of change of u8 is found As with ur u8 is a unit vector and can only rotate without changing size To remain orthogonal to ur while the trajectory r t rotates an amount d8 u8 which is orthogonal to r t also rotates by d8 See image above Therefore the change du8 is orthogonal to u8 and proportional to d8 see image above d u 8 d t d 8 d t u r displaystyle frac mathrm d mathbf u theta mathrm d t frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t mathbf u rho The image above shows the sign to be negative to maintain orthogonality if dur is positive with d8 then du8 must decrease Substituting the derivative of ur into the expression for velocity v d r d t u r r u 8 d 8 d t v r u r v 8 u 8 v r v 8 displaystyle mathbf v frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t mathbf u rho rho mathbf u theta frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t v rho mathbf u rho v theta mathbf u theta mathbf v rho mathbf v theta To obtain the acceleration another time differentiation is done a d 2 r d t 2 u r d r d t d u r d t d r d t u 8 d 8 d t r d u 8 d t d 8 d t r u 8 d 2 8 d t 2 displaystyle mathbf a frac mathrm d 2 rho mathrm d t 2 mathbf u rho frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t frac mathrm d mathbf u rho mathrm d t frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t mathbf u theta frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t rho frac mathrm d mathbf u theta mathrm d t frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t rho mathbf u theta frac mathrm d 2 theta mathrm d t 2 Substituting the derivatives of ur and u8 the acceleration of the particle is 20 a d 2 r d t 2 u r 2 d r d t u 8 d 8 d t r u r d 8 d t 2 r u 8 d 2 8 d t 2 u r d 2 r d t 2 r d 8 d t 2 u 8 2 d r d t d 8 d t r d 2 8 d t 2 u r d v r d t v 8 2 r u 8 2 r v r v 8 r d d t v 8 r displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a amp frac mathrm d 2 rho mathrm d t 2 mathbf u rho 2 frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t mathbf u theta frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t rho mathbf u rho left frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t right 2 rho mathbf u theta frac mathrm d 2 theta mathrm d t 2 amp mathbf u rho left frac mathrm d 2 rho mathrm d t 2 rho left frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t right 2 right mathbf u theta left 2 frac mathrm d rho mathrm d t frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t rho frac mathrm d 2 theta mathrm d t 2 right amp mathbf u rho left frac mathrm d v rho mathrm d t frac v theta 2 rho right mathbf u theta left frac 2 rho v rho v theta rho frac mathrm d mathrm d t frac v theta rho right end aligned As a particular example if the particle moves in a circle of constant radius R then dr dt 0 v v8 and a u r r d 8 d t 2 u 8 r d 2 8 d t 2 u r v 2 r u 8 d v d t displaystyle mathbf a mathbf u rho left rho left frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t right 2 right mathbf u theta left rho frac mathrm d 2 theta mathrm d t 2 right mathbf u rho left frac v 2 r right mathbf u theta left frac mathrm d v mathrm d t right where v v 8 displaystyle v v theta These results agree with those above for nonuniform circular motion See also the article on non uniform circular motion If this acceleration is multiplied by the particle mass the leading term is the centripetal force and the negative of the second term related to angular acceleration is sometimes called the Euler force 21 For trajectories other than circular motion for example the more general trajectory envisioned in the image above the instantaneous center of rotation and radius of curvature of the trajectory are related only indirectly to the coordinate system defined by ur and u8 and to the length r t r Consequently in the general case it is not straightforward to disentangle the centripetal and Euler terms from the above general acceleration equation 22 23 To deal directly with this issue local coordinates are preferable as discussed next Local coordinates Edit Local coordinate system for planar motion on a curve Two different positions are shown for distances s and s ds along the curve At each position s unit vector un points along the outward normal to the curve and unit vector ut is tangential to the path The radius of curvature of the path is r as found from the rate of rotation of the tangent to the curve with respect to arc length and is the radius of the osculating circle at position s The unit circle on the left shows the rotation of the unit vectors with s Local coordinates mean a set of coordinates that travel with the particle 24 and have orientation determined by the path of the particle 25 Unit vectors are formed as shown in the image at right both tangential and normal to the path This coordinate system sometimes is referred to as intrinsic or path coordinates 26 27 or nt coordinates for normal tangential referring to these unit vectors These coordinates are a very special example of a more general concept of local coordinates from the theory of differential forms 28 Distance along the path of the particle is the arc length s considered to be a known function of time s s t displaystyle s s t A center of curvature is defined at each position s located a distance r the radius of curvature from the curve on a line along the normal un s The required distance r s at arc length s is defined in terms of the rate of rotation of the tangent to the curve which in turn is determined by the path itself If the orientation of the tangent relative to some starting position is 8 s then r s is defined by the derivative d8 ds 1 r s k s d 8 d s displaystyle frac 1 rho s kappa s frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s The radius of curvature usually is taken as positive that is as an absolute value while the curvature k is a signed quantity A geometric approach to finding the center of curvature and the radius of curvature uses a limiting process leading to the osculating circle 29 30 See image above Using these coordinates the motion along the path is viewed as a succession of circular paths of ever changing center and at each position s constitutes non uniform circular motion at that position with radius r The local value of the angular rate of rotation then is given by w s d 8 d t d 8 d s d s d t 1 r s d s d t v s r s displaystyle omega s frac mathrm d theta mathrm d t frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s frac mathrm d s mathrm d t frac 1 rho s frac mathrm d s mathrm d t frac v s rho s with the local speed v given by v s d s d t displaystyle v s frac mathrm d s mathrm d t As for the other examples above because unit vectors cannot change magnitude their rate of change is always perpendicular to their direction see the left hand insert in the image above 31 d u n s d s u t s d 8 d s u t s 1 r displaystyle frac d mathbf u mathrm n s ds mathbf u mathrm t s frac d theta ds mathbf u mathrm t s frac 1 rho d u t s d s u n s d 8 d s u n s 1 r displaystyle frac d mathbf u mathrm t s mathrm d s mathbf u mathrm n s frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s mathbf u mathrm n s frac 1 rho Consequently the velocity and acceleration are 30 32 33 v t v u t s displaystyle mathbf v t v mathbf u mathrm t s and using the chain rule of differentiation a t d v d t u t s v 2 r u n s displaystyle mathbf a t frac mathrm d v mathrm d t mathbf u mathrm t s frac v 2 rho mathbf u mathrm n s with the tangential acceleration d v d t d v d s d s d t d v d s v displaystyle frac mathrm mathrm d v mathrm mathrm d t frac mathrm d v mathrm d s frac mathrm d s mathrm d t frac mathrm d v mathrm d s v In this local coordinate system the acceleration resembles the expression for nonuniform circular motion with the local radius r s and the centripetal acceleration is identified as the second term 34 Extending this approach to three dimensional space curves leads to the Frenet Serret formulas 35 36 Alternative approach Edit Looking at the image above one might wonder whether adequate account has been taken of the difference in curvature between r s and r s ds in computing the arc length as ds r s d8 Reassurance on this point can be found using a more formal approach outlined below This approach also makes connection with the article on curvature To introduce the unit vectors of the local coordinate system one approach is to begin in Cartesian coordinates and describe the local coordinates in terms of these Cartesian coordinates In terms of arc length s let the path be described as 37 r s x s y s displaystyle mathbf r s left x s y s right Then an incremental displacement along the path ds is described by d r s d x s d y s x s y s d s displaystyle mathrm d mathbf r s left mathrm d x s mathrm d y s right left x s y s right mathrm d s where primes are introduced to denote derivatives with respect to s The magnitude of this displacement is ds showing that 38 x s 2 y s 2 1 displaystyle left x s 2 y s 2 right 1 Eq 1 This displacement is necessarily a tangent to the curve at s showing that the unit vector tangent to the curve is u t s x s y s displaystyle mathbf u mathrm t s left x s y s right while the outward unit vector normal to the curve is u n s y s x s displaystyle mathbf u mathrm n s left y s x s right Orthogonality can be verified by showing that the vector dot product is zero The unit magnitude of these vectors is a consequence of Eq 1 Using the tangent vector the angle 8 of the tangent to the curve is given by sin 8 y s x s 2 y s 2 y s displaystyle sin theta frac y s sqrt x s 2 y s 2 y s and cos 8 x s x s 2 y s 2 x s displaystyle cos theta frac x s sqrt x s 2 y s 2 x s The radius of curvature is introduced completely formally without need for geometric interpretation as 1 r d 8 d s displaystyle frac 1 rho frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s The derivative of 8 can be found from that for sin8 d sin 8 d s cos 8 d 8 d s 1 r cos 8 1 r x s displaystyle frac mathrm d sin theta mathrm d s cos theta frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s frac 1 rho cos theta frac 1 rho x s Now d sin 8 d s d d s y s x s 2 y s 2 y s x s 2 y s x s x s x s 2 y s 2 3 2 displaystyle frac mathrm d sin theta mathrm d s frac mathrm d mathrm d s frac y s sqrt x s 2 y s 2 frac y s x s 2 y s x s x s left x s 2 y s 2 right 3 2 in which the denominator is unity With this formula for the derivative of the sine the radius of curvature becomes d 8 d s 1 r y s x s y s x s y s x s x s y s displaystyle frac mathrm d theta mathrm d s frac 1 rho y s x s y s x s frac y s x s frac x s y s where the equivalence of the forms stems from differentiation of Eq 1 x s x s y s y s 0 displaystyle x s x s y s y s 0 With these results the acceleration can be found a s d d t v s d d t d s d t x s y s d 2 s d t 2 u t s d s d t 2 x s y s d 2 s d t 2 u t s d s d t 2 1 r u n s displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a s amp frac mathrm d mathrm d t mathbf v s frac mathrm d mathrm d t left frac mathrm d s mathrm d t left x s y s right right amp left frac mathrm d 2 s mathrm d t 2 right mathbf u mathrm t s left frac mathrm d s mathrm d t right 2 left x s y s right amp left frac mathrm d 2 s mathrm d t 2 right mathbf u mathrm t s left frac mathrm d s mathrm d t right 2 frac 1 rho mathbf u mathrm n s end aligned as can be verified by taking the dot product with the unit vectors ut s and un s This result for acceleration is the same as that for circular motion based on the radius r Using this coordinate system in the inertial frame it is easy to identify the force normal to the trajectory as the centripetal force and that parallel to the trajectory as the tangential force From a qualitative standpoint the path can be approximated by an arc of a circle for a limited time and for the limited time a particular radius of curvature applies the centrifugal and Euler forces can be analyzed on the basis of circular motion with that radius This result for acceleration agrees with that found earlier However in this approach the question of the change in radius of curvature with s is handled completely formally consistent with a geometric interpretation but not relying upon it thereby avoiding any questions the image above might suggest about neglecting the variation in r Example circular motion Edit To illustrate the above formulas let x y be given as x a cos s a y a sin s a displaystyle x alpha cos frac s alpha y alpha sin frac s alpha Then x 2 y 2 a 2 displaystyle x 2 y 2 alpha 2 which can be recognized as a circular path around the origin with radius a The position s 0 corresponds to a 0 or 3 o clock To use the above formalism the derivatives are needed y s cos s a x s sin s a displaystyle y prime s cos frac s alpha x prime s sin frac s alpha y s 1 a sin s a x s 1 a cos s a displaystyle y prime prime s frac 1 alpha sin frac s alpha x prime prime s frac 1 alpha cos frac s alpha With these results one can verify that x s 2 y s 2 1 1 r y s x s y s x s 1 a displaystyle x prime s 2 y prime s 2 1 frac 1 rho y prime prime s x prime s y prime s x prime prime s frac 1 alpha The unit vectors can also be found u t s sin s a cos s a u n s cos s a sin s a displaystyle mathbf u mathrm t s left sin frac s alpha cos frac s alpha right mathbf u mathrm n s left cos frac s alpha sin frac s alpha right which serve to show that s 0 is located at position r 0 and s rp 2 at 0 r which agrees with the original expressions for x and y In other words s is measured counterclockwise around the circle from 3 o clock Also the derivatives of these vectors can be found d d s u t s 1 a cos s a sin s a 1 a u n s displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d s mathbf u mathrm t s frac 1 alpha left cos frac s alpha sin frac s alpha right frac 1 alpha mathbf u mathrm n s d d s u n s 1 a sin s a cos s a 1 a u t s displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d s mathbf u mathrm n s frac 1 alpha left sin frac s alpha cos frac s alpha right frac 1 alpha mathbf u mathrm t s To obtain velocity and acceleration a time dependence for s is necessary For counterclockwise motion at variable speed v t s t 0 t d t v t displaystyle s t int 0 t dt prime v t prime where v t is the speed and t is time and s t 0 0 Then v v t u t s displaystyle mathbf v v t mathbf u mathrm t s a d v d t u t s v d d t u t s d v d t u t s v 1 a u n s d s d t displaystyle mathbf a frac mathrm d v mathrm d t mathbf u mathrm t s v frac mathrm d mathrm d t mathbf u mathrm t s frac mathrm d v mathrm d t mathbf u mathrm t s v frac 1 alpha mathbf u mathrm n s frac mathrm d s mathrm d t a d v d t u t s v 2 a u n s displaystyle mathbf a frac mathrm d v mathrm d t mathbf u mathrm t s frac v 2 alpha mathbf u mathrm n s where it already is established that a r This acceleration is the standard result for non uniform circular motion See also EditAnalytical mechanics Applied mechanics Bertrand theorem Central force Centrifugal force Circular motion Classical mechanics Coriolis force Dynamics physics Eskimo yo yo Example circular motion Fictitious force Frenet Serret formulas History of centrifugal and centripetal forces Kinematics Kinetics Mechanics of planar particle motion Orthogonal coordinates Reactive centrifugal force StaticsNotes and references Edit Craig John 1849 A new universal etymological technological and pronouncing dictionary of the English language embracing all terms used in art science and literature Volume 1 Harvard University p 291 Extract of page 291 Newton Isaac 2010 The principia mathematical principles of natural philosophy S l Snowball Pub p 10 ISBN 978 1 60796 240 3 Russelkl C Hibbeler 2009 Equations of Motion Normal and tangential coordinates Engineering Mechanics Dynamics 12 ed Prentice Hall p 131 ISBN 978 0 13 607791 6 Paul Allen Tipler Gene Mosca 2003 Physics for scientists and engineers 5th ed Macmillan p 129 ISBN 978 0 7167 8339 8 P Germain M Piau D Caillerie eds 2012 Theoretical and Applied Mechanics Elsevier ISBN 9780444600202 Chris Carter 2001 Facts and Practice for A Level Physics S 2 Oxford University Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 19 914768 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b OpenStax CNX Uniform Circular Motion Eugene Lommel George William Myers 1900 Experimental physics K Paul Trench Trubner amp Co p 63 Colwell Catharine H A Derivation of the Formulas for Centripetal Acceleration PhysicsLAB Archived from the original on 15 August 2011 Retrieved 31 July 2011 Conte Mario Mackay William W 1991 An Introduction to the Physics of Particle Accelerators World Scientific p 8 ISBN 978 981 4518 00 0 Extract of page 8 Theo Koupelis 2010 In Quest of the Universe 6th ed Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 83 ISBN 978 0 7637 6858 4 A V Durrant 1996 Vectors in physics and engineering CRC Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 412 62710 1 Lawrence S Lerner 1997 Physics for Scientists and Engineers Boston Jones amp Bartlett Publishers p 128 ISBN 978 0 86720 479 7 Arthur Beiser 2004 Schaum s Outline of Applied Physics New York McGraw Hill Professional p 103 ISBN 978 0 07 142611 4 Alan Darbyshire 2003 Mechanical Engineering BTEC National Option Units Oxford Newnes p 56 ISBN 978 0 7506 5761 7 Federal Aviation Administration 2007 Pilot s Encyclopedia of Aeronautical Knowledge Oklahoma City OK Skyhorse Publishing Inc Figure 3 21 ISBN 978 1 60239 034 8 Note unlike the Cartesian unit vectors i displaystyle hat mathbf i and j displaystyle hat mathbf j which are constant in polar coordinates the direction of the unit vectors ur and u8 depend on 8 and so in general have non zero time derivatives Although the polar coordinate system moves with the particle the observer does not The description of the particle motion remains a description from the stationary observer s point of view Notice that this local coordinate system is not autonomous for example its rotation in time is dictated by the trajectory traced by the particle The radial vector r t does not represent the radius of curvature of the path John Robert Taylor 2005 Classical Mechanics Sausalito CA University Science Books pp 28 29 ISBN 978 1 891389 22 1 Cornelius Lanczos 1986 The Variational Principles of Mechanics New York Courier Dover Publications p 103 ISBN 978 0 486 65067 8 See for example Howard D Curtis 2005 Orbital Mechanics for Engineering Students Butterworth Heinemann p 5 ISBN 978 0 7506 6169 0 S Y Lee 2004 Accelerator physics 2nd ed Hackensack NJ World Scientific p 37 ISBN 978 981 256 182 4 The observer of the motion along the curve is using these local coordinates to describe the motion from the observer s frame of reference that is from a stationary point of view In other words although the local coordinate system moves with the particle the observer does not A change in coordinate system used by the observer is only a change in their description of observations and does not mean that the observer has changed their state of motion and vice versa Zhilin Li Kazufumi Ito 2006 The immersed interface method numerical solutions of PDEs involving interfaces and irregular domains Philadelphia Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics p 16 ISBN 978 0 89871 609 2 K L Kumar 2003 Engineering Mechanics New Delhi Tata McGraw Hill p 339 ISBN 978 0 07 049473 2 Lakshmana C Rao J Lakshminarasimhan Raju Sethuraman SM Sivakuma 2004 Engineering Dynamics Statics and Dynamics Prentice Hall of India p 133 ISBN 978 81 203 2189 2 Shigeyuki Morita 2001 Geometry of Differential Forms American Mathematical Society p 1 ISBN 978 0 8218 1045 3 local coordinates The osculating circle at a given point P on a curve is the limiting circle of a sequence of circles that pass through P and two other points on the curve Q and R on either side of P as Q and R approach P See the online text by Lamb Horace Lamb 1897 An Elementary Course of Infinitesimal Calculus University Press p 406 ISBN 978 1 108 00534 0 osculating circle a b Guang Chen Fook Fah Yap 2003 An Introduction to Planar Dynamics 3rd ed Central Learning Asia Thomson Learning Asia p 34 ISBN 978 981 243 568 2 R Douglas Gregory 2006 Classical Mechanics An Undergraduate Text Cambridge University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 521 82678 5 Edmund Taylor Whittaker William McCrea 1988 A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies with an introduction to the problem of three bodies 4th ed Cambridge University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 521 35883 5 Jerry H Ginsberg 2007 Engineering Dynamics Cambridge University Press p 33 ISBN 978 0 521 88303 0 Joseph F Shelley 1990 800 solved problems in vector mechanics for engineers Dynamics McGraw Hill Professional p 47 ISBN 978 0 07 056687 3 Larry C Andrews Ronald L Phillips 2003 Mathematical Techniques for Engineers and Scientists SPIE Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 8194 4506 3 Ch V Ramana Murthy NC Srinivas 2001 Applied Mathematics New Delhi S Chand amp Co p 337 ISBN 978 81 219 2082 7 The article on curvature treats a more general case where the curve is parametrized by an arbitrary variable denoted t rather than by the arc length s Ahmed A Shabana Khaled E Zaazaa Hiroyuki Sugiyama 2007 Railroad Vehicle Dynamics A Computational Approach CRC Press p 91 ISBN 978 1 4200 4581 9 Further reading EditSerway Raymond A Jewett John W 2004 Physics for Scientists and Engineers 6th ed Brooks Cole ISBN 978 0 534 40842 8 Tipler Paul 2004 Physics for Scientists and Engineers Mechanics Oscillations and Waves Thermodynamics 5th ed W H Freeman ISBN 978 0 7167 0809 4 Centripetal force vs Centrifugal force from an online Regents Exam physics tutorial by the Oswego City School DistrictExternal links Edit Look up centripetal in Wiktionary the free dictionary Notes from Physics and Astronomy HyperPhysics at Georgia State University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Centripetal force amp oldid 1147078996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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