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Circular motion

In physics, circular motion is a movement of an object along the circumference of a circle or rotation along a circular arc. It can be uniform, with a constant rate of rotation and constant tangential speed, or non-uniform with a changing rate of rotation. The rotation around a fixed axis of a three-dimensional body involves the circular motion of its parts. The equations of motion describe the movement of the center of mass of a body, which remains at a constant distance from the axis of rotation. In circular motion, the distance between the body and a fixed point on its surface remains the same, i.e., the body is assumed rigid.

Examples of circular motion include: special satellite orbits around the Earth (circular orbits), a ceiling fan's blades rotating around a hub, a stone that is tied to a rope and is being swung in circles, a car turning through a curve in a race track, an electron moving perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field, and a gear turning inside a mechanism.

Since the object's velocity vector is constantly changing direction, the moving object is undergoing acceleration by a centripetal force in the direction of the center of rotation. Without this acceleration, the object would move in a straight line, according to Newton's laws of motion.

Uniform circular motion edit

 
Figure 1: Velocity v and acceleration a in uniform circular motion at angular rate ω; the speed is constant, but the velocity is always tangent to the orbit; the acceleration has constant magnitude, but always points toward the center of rotation.
 
Figure 2: The velocity vectors at time t and time t + dt are moved from the orbit on the left to new positions where their tails coincide, on the right. Because the velocity is fixed in magnitude at v = r ω, the velocity vectors also sweep out a circular path at angular rate ω. As dt → 0, the acceleration vector a becomes perpendicular to v, which means it points toward the center of the orbit in the circle on the left. Angle ω dt is the very small angle between the two velocities and tends to zero as dt → 0.
 
Figure 3: (Left) Ball in a circular motion – rope provides centripetal force to keep the ball in a circle (Right) Rope is cut and the ball continues in a straight line with the velocity at the time of cutting the rope, in accord with Newton's law of inertia, because centripetal force is no longer there.

In physics, uniform circular motion describes the motion of a body traversing a circular path at a constant speed. Since the body describes circular motion, its distance from the axis of rotation remains constant at all times. Though the body's speed is constant, its velocity is not constant: velocity, a vector quantity, depends on both the body's speed and its direction of travel. This changing velocity indicates the presence of an acceleration; this centripetal acceleration is of constant magnitude and directed at all times toward the axis of rotation. This acceleration is, in turn, produced by a centripetal force which is also constant in magnitude and directed toward the axis of rotation.

In the case of rotation around a fixed axis of a rigid body that is not negligibly small compared to the radius of the path, each particle of the body describes a uniform circular motion with the same angular velocity, but with velocity and acceleration varying with the position with respect to the axis.

Formulas edit

 
Figure 1: Vector relationships for uniform circular motion; vector ω representing the rotation is normal to the plane of the orbit.

For motion in a circle of radius r, the circumference of the circle is C = 2πr. If the period for one rotation is T, the angular rate of rotation, also known as angular velocity, ω is:

 
and the units are radians/second.

The speed of the object traveling the circle is:

 

The angle θ swept out in a time t is:

 

The angular acceleration, α, of the particle is:

 

In the case of uniform circular motion, α will be zero.

The acceleration due to change in the direction is:

 

The centripetal and centrifugal force can also be found using acceleration:

 

The vector relationships are shown in Figure 1. The axis of rotation is shown as a vector ω perpendicular to the plane of the orbit and with a magnitude ω = / dt. The direction of ω is chosen using the right-hand rule. With this convention for depicting rotation, the velocity is given by a vector cross product as

 
which is a vector perpendicular to both ω and r(t), tangential to the orbit, and of magnitude ω r. Likewise, the acceleration is given by
 
which is a vector perpendicular to both ω and v(t) of magnitude ω |v| = ω2 r and directed exactly opposite to r(t).[1]

In the simplest case the speed, mass, and radius are constant.

Consider a body of one kilogram, moving in a circle of radius one metre, with an angular velocity of one radian per second.

In polar coordinates edit

 
Figure 4: Polar coordinates for circular trajectory. On the left is a unit circle showing the changes   and   in the unit vectors   and   for a small increment   in angle  .

During circular motion, the body moves on a curve that can be described in the polar coordinate system as a fixed distance R from the center of the orbit taken as the origin, oriented at an angle θ(t) from some reference direction. See Figure 4. The displacement vector   is the radial vector from the origin to the particle location:

 
where   is the unit vector parallel to the radius vector at time t and pointing away from the origin. It is convenient to introduce the unit vector orthogonal to   as well, namely  . It is customary to orient   to point in the direction of travel along the orbit.

The velocity is the time derivative of the displacement:

 

Because the radius of the circle is constant, the radial component of the velocity is zero. The unit vector   has a time-invariant magnitude of unity, so as time varies its tip always lies on a circle of unit radius, with an angle θ the same as the angle of  . If the particle displacement rotates through an angle in time dt, so does  , describing an arc on the unit circle of magnitude . See the unit circle at the left of Figure 4. Hence:

 
where the direction of the change must be perpendicular to   (or, in other words, along  ) because any change   in the direction of   would change the size of  . The sign is positive because an increase in implies the object and   have moved in the direction of  . Hence the velocity becomes:
 

The acceleration of the body can also be broken into radial and tangential components. The acceleration is the time derivative of the velocity:

 

The time derivative of   is found the same way as for  . Again,   is a unit vector and its tip traces a unit circle with an angle that is π/2 + θ. Hence, an increase in angle by   implies   traces an arc of magnitude , and as   is orthogonal to  , we have:

 
where a negative sign is necessary to keep   orthogonal to  . (Otherwise, the angle between   and   would decrease with an increase in .) See the unit circle at the left of Figure 4. Consequently, the acceleration is:
 

The centripetal acceleration is the radial component, which is directed radially inward:

 
while the tangential component changes the magnitude of the velocity:
 

Using complex numbers edit

Circular motion can be described using complex numbers. Let the x axis be the real axis and the   axis be the imaginary axis. The position of the body can then be given as  , a complex "vector":

 
where i is the imaginary unit, and   is the argument of the complex number as a function of time, t.

Since the radius is constant:

 
where a dot indicates differentiation in respect of time.

With this notation, the velocity becomes:

 
and the acceleration becomes:
 

The first term is opposite in direction to the displacement vector and the second is perpendicular to it, just like the earlier results shown before.

Velocity edit

Figure 1 illustrates velocity and acceleration vectors for uniform motion at four different points in the orbit. Because the velocity v is tangent to the circular path, no two velocities point in the same direction. Although the object has a constant speed, its direction is always changing. This change in velocity is caused by an acceleration a, whose magnitude is (like that of the velocity) held constant, but whose direction also is always changing. The acceleration points radially inwards (centripetally) and is perpendicular to the velocity. This acceleration is known as centripetal acceleration.

For a path of radius r, when an angle θ is swept out, the distance traveled on the periphery of the orbit is s = . Therefore, the speed of travel around the orbit is

 
where the angular rate of rotation is ω. (By rearrangement, ω = v/r.) Thus, v is a constant, and the velocity vector v also rotates with constant magnitude v, at the same angular rate ω.

Relativistic circular motion edit

In this case, the three-acceleration vector is perpendicular to the three-velocity vector,

 
and the square of proper acceleration, expressed as a scalar invariant, the same in all reference frames,
 
becomes the expression for circular motion,
 
or, taking the positive square root and using the three-acceleration, we arrive at the proper acceleration for circular motion:
 

Acceleration edit

The left-hand circle in Figure 2 is the orbit showing the velocity vectors at two adjacent times. On the right, these two velocities are moved so their tails coincide. Because speed is constant, the velocity vectors on the right sweep out a circle as time advances. For a swept angle = ω dt the change in v is a vector at right angles to v and of magnitude v , which in turn means that the magnitude of the acceleration is given by

 
Centripetal acceleration for some values of radius and magnitude of velocity
|v|
r
1 m/s
3.6 km/h
2.2 mph
2 m/s
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5 m/s
18 km/h
11 mph
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36 km/h
22 mph
20 m/s
72 km/h
45 mph
50 m/s
180 km/h
110 mph
100 m/s
360 km/h
220 mph
Slow walk Bicycle City car Aerobatics
10 cm
3.9 in
Laboratory
centrifuge
10 m/s2
1.0 g
40 m/s2
4.1 g
250 m/s2
25 g
1.0 km/s2
100 g
4.0 km/s2
410 g
25 km/s2
2500 g
100 km/s2
10000 g
20 cm
7.9 in
5.0 m/s2
0.51 g
20 m/s2
2.0 g
130 m/s2
13 g
500 m/s2
51 g
2.0 km/s2
200 g
13 km/s2
1300 g
50 km/s2
5100 g
50 cm
1.6 ft
2.0 m/s2
0.20 g
8.0 m/s2
0.82 g
50 m/s2
5.1 g
200 m/s2
20 g
800 m/s2
82 g
5.0 km/s2
510 g
20 km/s2
2000 g
1 m
3.3 ft
Playground
carousel
1.0 m/s2
0.10 g
4.0 m/s2
0.41 g
25 m/s2
2.5 g
100 m/s2
10 g
400 m/s2
41 g
2.5 km/s2
250 g
10 km/s2
1000 g
2 m
6.6 ft
500 mm/s2
0.051 g
2.0 m/s2
0.20 g
13 m/s2
1.3 g
50 m/s2
5.1 g
200 m/s2
20 g
1.3 km/s2
130 g
5.0 km/s2
510 g
5 m
16 ft
200 mm/s2
0.020 g
800 mm/s2
0.082 g
5.0 m/s2
0.51 g
20 m/s2
2.0 g
80 m/s2
8.2 g
500 m/s2
51 g
2.0 km/s2
200 g
10 m
33 ft
Roller-coaster
vertical loop
100 mm/s2
0.010 g
400 mm/s2
0.041 g
2.5 m/s2
0.25 g
10 m/s2
1.0 g
40 m/s2
4.1 g
250 m/s2
25 g
1.0 km/s2
100 g
20 m
66 ft
50 mm/s2
0.0051 g
200 mm/s2
0.020 g
1.3 m/s2
0.13 g
5.0 m/s2
0.51 g
20 m/s2
2 g
130 m/s2
13 g
500 m/s2
51 g
50 m
160 ft
20 mm/s2
0.0020 g
80 mm/s2
0.0082 g
500 mm/s2
0.051 g
2.0 m/s2
0.20 g
8.0 m/s2
0.82 g
50 m/s2
5.1 g
200 m/s2
20 g
100 m
330 ft
Freeway
on-ramp
10 mm/s2
0.0010 g
40 mm/s2
0.0041 g
250 mm/s2
0.025 g
1.0 m/s2
0.10 g
4.0 m/s2
0.41 g
25 m/s2
2.5 g
100 m/s2
10 g
200 m
660 ft
5.0 mm/s2
0.00051 g
20 mm/s2
0.0020 g
130 m/s2
0.013 g
500 mm/s2
0.051 g
2.0 m/s2
0.20 g
13 m/s2
1.3 g
50 m/s2
5.1 g
500 m
1600 ft
2.0 mm/s2
0.00020 g
8.0 mm/s2
0.00082 g
50 mm/s2
0.0051 g
200 mm/s2
0.020 g
800 mm/s2
0.082 g
5.0 m/s2
0.51 g
20 m/s2
2.0 g
1 km
3300 ft
High-speed
railway
1.0 mm/s2
0.00010 g
4.0 mm/s2
0.00041 g
25 mm/s2
0.0025 g
100 mm/s2
0.010 g
400 mm/s2
0.041 g
2.5 m/s2
0.25 g
10 m/s2
1.0 g

Non-uniform edit

 

In a non-uniform circular motion, an object is moving in a circular path with a varying speed. Since the speed is changing, there is tangential acceleration in addition to normal acceleration.

In a non-uniform circular motion, the net acceleration (a) is along the direction of Δv, which is directed inside the circle but does not pass through its center (see figure). The net acceleration may be resolved into two components: tangential acceleration and normal acceleration also known as the centripetal or radial acceleration. Unlike tangential acceleration, centripetal acceleration is present in both uniform and non-uniform circular motion.

 

In a non-uniform circular motion, normal force does not always point in the opposite direction of weight. Here is an example with an object traveling in a straight path then looping a loop back into a straight path again.

 

This diagram shows the normal force pointing in other directions rather than opposite to the weight force. The normal force is actually the sum of the radial and tangential forces. The component of weight force is responsible for the tangential force here (We have neglected frictional force). The radial force (centripetal force) is due to the change in the direction of velocity as discussed earlier.

In a non-uniform circular motion, normal force and weight may point in the same direction. Both forces can point down, yet the object will remain in a circular path without falling straight down. First, let's see why normal force can point down in the first place. In the first diagram, let's say the object is a person sitting inside a plane, the two forces point down only when it reaches the top of the circle. The reason for this is that the normal force is the sum of the tangential force and centripetal force. The tangential force is zero at the top (as no work is performed when the motion is perpendicular to the direction of force applied. Here weight force is perpendicular to the direction of motion of the object at the top of the circle) and centripetal force points down, thus normal force will point down as well. From a logical standpoint, a person who is travelling in the plane will be upside down at the top of the circle. At that moment, the person's seat is actually pushing down on the person, which is the normal force.

 

The reason why the object does not fall down when subjected to only downward forces is a simple one. Think about what keeps an object up after it is thrown. Once an object is thrown into the air, there is only the downward force of Earth's gravity that acts on the object. That does not mean that once an object is thrown in the air, it will fall instantly. What keeps that object up in the air is its velocity. The first of Newton's laws of motion states that an object's inertia keeps it in motion, and since the object in the air has a velocity, it will tend to keep moving in that direction.

A varying angular speed for an object moving in a circular path can also be achieved if the rotating body does not have a homogeneous mass distribution. For inhomogeneous objects, it is necessary to approach the problem as in.[2]

Applications edit

Solving applications dealing with non-uniform circular motion involves force analysis. With a uniform circular motion, the only force acting upon an object traveling in a circle is the centripetal force. In a non-uniform circular motion, there are additional forces acting on the object due to a non-zero tangential acceleration. Although there are additional forces acting upon the object, the sum of all the forces acting on the object will have to be equal to the centripetal force.

 

Radial acceleration is used when calculating the total force. Tangential acceleration is not used in calculating total force because it is not responsible for keeping the object in a circular path. The only acceleration responsible for keeping an object moving in a circle is the radial acceleration. Since the sum of all forces is the centripetal force, drawing centripetal force into a free body diagram is not necessary and usually not recommended.

Using  , we can draw free body diagrams to list all the forces acting on an object and then set it equal to  . Afterward, we can solve for whatever is unknown (this can be mass, velocity, radius of curvature, coefficient of friction, normal force, etc.). For example, the visual above showing an object at the top of a semicircle would be expressed as  .

In a uniform circular motion, the total acceleration of an object in a circular path is equal to the radial acceleration. Due to the presence of tangential acceleration in a non uniform circular motion, that does not hold true any more. To find the total acceleration of an object in a non uniform circular, find the vector sum of the tangential acceleration and the radial acceleration.

 

Radial acceleration is still equal to  . Tangential acceleration is simply the derivative of the speed at any given point:  . This root sum of squares of separate radial and tangential accelerations is only correct for circular motion; for general motion within a plane with polar coordinates  , the Coriolis term   should be added to  , whereas radial acceleration then becomes  .

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Knudsen, Jens M.; Hjorth, Poul G. (2000). Elements of Newtonian mechanics: including nonlinear dynamics (3 ed.). Springer. p. 96. ISBN 3-540-67652-X.
  2. ^ Gomez, R W; Hernandez-Gomez, J J; Marquina, V (25 July 2012). "A jumping cylinder on an inclined plane". Eur. J. Phys. IOP. 33 (5): 1359–1365. arXiv:1204.0600. Bibcode:2012EJPh...33.1359G. doi:10.1088/0143-0807/33/5/1359. S2CID 55442794. Retrieved 25 April 2016.

External links edit

  • from the University of New South Wales
  • Circular Motion – a chapter from an online textbook, Mechanics, by Benjamin Crowell (2019)
  • – a video lecture on CM
  • [1] – an online textbook with different analysis for circular motion

circular, motion, radial, motion, redirects, here, confused, with, radial, velocity, rotational, speed, physics, circular, motion, movement, object, along, circumference, circle, rotation, along, circular, uniform, with, constant, rate, rotation, constant, tan. Radial motion redirects here Not to be confused with radial velocity or rotational speed In physics circular motion is a movement of an object along the circumference of a circle or rotation along a circular arc It can be uniform with a constant rate of rotation and constant tangential speed or non uniform with a changing rate of rotation The rotation around a fixed axis of a three dimensional body involves the circular motion of its parts The equations of motion describe the movement of the center of mass of a body which remains at a constant distance from the axis of rotation In circular motion the distance between the body and a fixed point on its surface remains the same i e the body is assumed rigid Examples of circular motion include special satellite orbits around the Earth circular orbits a ceiling fan s blades rotating around a hub a stone that is tied to a rope and is being swung in circles a car turning through a curve in a race track an electron moving perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field and a gear turning inside a mechanism Since the object s velocity vector is constantly changing direction the moving object is undergoing acceleration by a centripetal force in the direction of the center of rotation Without this acceleration the object would move in a straight line according to Newton s laws of motion Contents 1 Uniform circular motion 1 1 Formulas 1 1 1 In polar coordinates 1 1 2 Using complex numbers 1 1 3 Velocity 1 1 4 Relativistic circular motion 1 1 5 Acceleration 2 Non uniform 3 Applications 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksUniform circular motion edit nbsp Figure 1 Velocity v and acceleration a in uniform circular motion at angular rate w the speed is constant but the velocity is always tangent to the orbit the acceleration has constant magnitude but always points toward the center of rotation nbsp Figure 2 The velocity vectors at time t and time t dt are moved from the orbit on the left to new positions where their tails coincide on the right Because the velocity is fixed in magnitude at v r w the velocity vectors also sweep out a circular path at angular rate w As dt 0 the acceleration vector a becomes perpendicular to v which means it points toward the center of the orbit in the circle on the left Angle w dt is the very small angle between the two velocities and tends to zero as dt 0 nbsp Figure 3 Left Ball in a circular motion rope provides centripetal force to keep the ball in a circle Right Rope is cut and the ball continues in a straight line with the velocity at the time of cutting the rope in accord with Newton s law of inertia because centripetal force is no longer there In physics uniform circular motion describes the motion of a body traversing a circular path at a constant speed Since the body describes circular motion its distance from the axis of rotation remains constant at all times Though the body s speed is constant its velocity is not constant velocity a vector quantity depends on both the body s speed and its direction of travel This changing velocity indicates the presence of an acceleration this centripetal acceleration is of constant magnitude and directed at all times toward the axis of rotation This acceleration is in turn produced by a centripetal force which is also constant in magnitude and directed toward the axis of rotation In the case of rotation around a fixed axis of a rigid body that is not negligibly small compared to the radius of the path each particle of the body describes a uniform circular motion with the same angular velocity but with velocity and acceleration varying with the position with respect to the axis Formulas edit nbsp Figure 1 Vector relationships for uniform circular motion vector w representing the rotation is normal to the plane of the orbit For motion in a circle of radius r the circumference of the circle is C 2pr If the period for one rotation is T the angular rate of rotation also known as angular velocity w is w 2 p T 2 p f d 8 d t displaystyle omega frac 2 pi T 2 pi f frac d theta dt nbsp and the units are radians second The speed of the object traveling the circle is v 2 p r T w r displaystyle v frac 2 pi r T omega r nbsp The angle 8 swept out in a time t is 8 2 p t T w t displaystyle theta 2 pi frac t T omega t nbsp The angular acceleration a of the particle is a d w d t displaystyle alpha frac d omega dt nbsp In the case of uniform circular motion a will be zero The acceleration due to change in the direction is a c v 2 r w 2 r displaystyle a c frac v 2 r omega 2 r nbsp The centripetal and centrifugal force can also be found using acceleration F c p m 0 m a c m v 2 r displaystyle F c dot p mathrel overset dot m 0 ma c frac mv 2 r nbsp The vector relationships are shown in Figure 1 The axis of rotation is shown as a vector w perpendicular to the plane of the orbit and with a magnitude w d8 dt The direction of w is chosen using the right hand rule With this convention for depicting rotation the velocity is given by a vector cross product asv w r displaystyle mathbf v boldsymbol omega times mathbf r nbsp which is a vector perpendicular to both w and r t tangential to the orbit and of magnitude w r Likewise the acceleration is given by a w v w w r displaystyle mathbf a boldsymbol omega times mathbf v boldsymbol omega times left boldsymbol omega times mathbf r right nbsp which is a vector perpendicular to both w and v t of magnitude w v w2 r and directed exactly opposite to r t 1 In the simplest case the speed mass and radius are constant Consider a body of one kilogram moving in a circle of radius one metre with an angular velocity of one radian per second The speed is 1 metre per second The inward acceleration is 1 metre per square second v2 r It is subject to a centripetal force of 1 kilogram metre per square second which is 1 newton The momentum of the body is 1 kg m s 1 The moment of inertia is 1 kg m2 The angular momentum is 1 kg m2 s 1 The kinetic energy is 1 joule The circumference of the orbit is 2p 6 283 metres The period of the motion is 2p seconds per turn The frequency is 2p 1 hertz In polar coordinates edit See also Velocity Polar coordinates nbsp Figure 4 Polar coordinates for circular trajectory On the left is a unit circle showing the changes d u R displaystyle mathbf d hat mathbf u R nbsp and d u 8 displaystyle mathbf d hat mathbf u theta nbsp in the unit vectors u R displaystyle mathbf hat mathbf u R nbsp and u 8 displaystyle mathbf hat mathbf u theta nbsp for a small increment d 8 displaystyle d theta nbsp in angle 8 displaystyle theta nbsp During circular motion the body moves on a curve that can be described in the polar coordinate system as a fixed distance R from the center of the orbit taken as the origin oriented at an angle 8 t from some reference direction See Figure 4 The displacement vector r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp is the radial vector from the origin to the particle location r t R u R t displaystyle mathbf r t R hat mathbf u R t nbsp where u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp is the unit vector parallel to the radius vector at time t and pointing away from the origin It is convenient to introduce the unit vector orthogonal to u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp as well namely u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp It is customary to orient u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp to point in the direction of travel along the orbit The velocity is the time derivative of the displacement v t d d t r t d R d t u R t R d u R d t displaystyle mathbf v t frac d dt mathbf r t frac dR dt hat mathbf u R t R frac d hat mathbf u R dt nbsp Because the radius of the circle is constant the radial component of the velocity is zero The unit vector u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp has a time invariant magnitude of unity so as time varies its tip always lies on a circle of unit radius with an angle 8 the same as the angle of r t displaystyle mathbf r t nbsp If the particle displacement rotates through an angle d8 in time dt so does u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp describing an arc on the unit circle of magnitude d8 See the unit circle at the left of Figure 4 Hence d u R d t d 8 d t u 8 t displaystyle frac d hat mathbf u R dt frac d theta dt hat mathbf u theta t nbsp where the direction of the change must be perpendicular to u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp or in other words along u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp because any change d u R t displaystyle d hat mathbf u R t nbsp in the direction of u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp would change the size of u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp The sign is positive because an increase in d8 implies the object and u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp have moved in the direction of u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp Hence the velocity becomes v t d d t r t R d u R d t R d 8 d t u 8 t R w u 8 t displaystyle mathbf v t frac d dt mathbf r t R frac d hat mathbf u R dt R frac d theta dt hat mathbf u theta t R omega hat mathbf u theta t nbsp The acceleration of the body can also be broken into radial and tangential components The acceleration is the time derivative of the velocity a t d d t v t d d t R w u 8 t R d w d t u 8 t w d u 8 d t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a t amp frac d dt mathbf v t frac d dt left R omega hat mathbf u theta t right amp R left frac d omega dt hat mathbf u theta t omega frac d hat mathbf u theta dt right end aligned nbsp The time derivative of u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp is found the same way as for u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp Again u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp is a unit vector and its tip traces a unit circle with an angle that is p 2 8 Hence an increase in angle d8 by r t displaystyle mathbf r t nbsp implies u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp traces an arc of magnitude d8 and as u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp is orthogonal to u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp we have d u 8 d t d 8 d t u R t w u R t displaystyle frac d hat mathbf u theta dt frac d theta dt hat mathbf u R t omega hat mathbf u R t nbsp where a negative sign is necessary to keep u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp orthogonal to u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp Otherwise the angle between u 8 t displaystyle hat mathbf u theta t nbsp and u R t displaystyle hat mathbf u R t nbsp would decrease with an increase in d8 See the unit circle at the left of Figure 4 Consequently the acceleration is a t R d w d t u 8 t w d u 8 d t R d w d t u 8 t w 2 R u R t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf a t amp R left frac d omega dt hat mathbf u theta t omega frac d hat mathbf u theta dt right amp R frac d omega dt hat mathbf u theta t omega 2 R hat mathbf u R t end aligned nbsp The centripetal acceleration is the radial component which is directed radially inward a R t w 2 R u R t displaystyle mathbf a R t omega 2 R hat mathbf u R t nbsp while the tangential component changes the magnitude of the velocity a 8 t R d w d t u 8 t d R w d t u 8 t d v t d t u 8 t displaystyle mathbf a theta t R frac d omega dt hat mathbf u theta t frac dR omega dt hat mathbf u theta t frac d left mathbf v t right dt hat mathbf u theta t nbsp Using complex numbers edit Circular motion can be described using complex numbers Let the x axis be the real axis and the y displaystyle y nbsp axis be the imaginary axis The position of the body can then be given as z displaystyle z nbsp a complex vector z x i y R cos 8 t i sin 8 t R e i 8 t displaystyle z x iy R left cos theta t i sin theta t right Re i theta t nbsp where i is the imaginary unit and 8 t displaystyle theta t nbsp is the argument of the complex number as a function of time t Since the radius is constant R R 0 displaystyle dot R ddot R 0 nbsp where a dot indicates differentiation in respect of time With this notation the velocity becomes v z d d t R e i 8 t R d d t e i 8 t R e i 8 t d d t i 8 t i R 8 t e i 8 t i w R e i 8 t i w z displaystyle v dot z frac d dt left Re i theta t right R frac d dt left e i theta t right Re i theta t frac d dt left i theta t right iR dot theta t e i theta t i omega Re i theta t i omega z nbsp and the acceleration becomes a v i w z i w z i w w 2 z i w w 2 R e i 8 t w 2 R e i 8 t w e i p 2 R e i 8 t displaystyle begin aligned a amp dot v i dot omega z i omega dot z left i dot omega omega 2 right z amp left i dot omega omega 2 right Re i theta t amp omega 2 Re i theta t dot omega e i frac pi 2 Re i theta t end aligned nbsp The first term is opposite in direction to the displacement vector and the second is perpendicular to it just like the earlier results shown before Velocity edit Figure 1 illustrates velocity and acceleration vectors for uniform motion at four different points in the orbit Because the velocity v is tangent to the circular path no two velocities point in the same direction Although the object has a constant speed its direction is always changing This change in velocity is caused by an acceleration a whose magnitude is like that of the velocity held constant but whose direction also is always changing The acceleration points radially inwards centripetally and is perpendicular to the velocity This acceleration is known as centripetal acceleration For a path of radius r when an angle 8 is swept out the distance traveled on the periphery of the orbit is s r8 Therefore the speed of travel around the orbit isv r d 8 d t r w displaystyle v r frac d theta dt r omega nbsp where the angular rate of rotation is w By rearrangement w v r Thus v is a constant and the velocity vector v also rotates with constant magnitude v at the same angular rate w Relativistic circular motion edit In this case the three acceleration vector is perpendicular to the three velocity vector u a 0 displaystyle mathbf u cdot mathbf a 0 nbsp and the square of proper acceleration expressed as a scalar invariant the same in all reference frames a 2 g 4 a 2 g 6 u a 2 displaystyle alpha 2 gamma 4 a 2 gamma 6 left mathbf u cdot mathbf a right 2 nbsp becomes the expression for circular motion a 2 g 4 a 2 displaystyle alpha 2 gamma 4 a 2 nbsp or taking the positive square root and using the three acceleration we arrive at the proper acceleration for circular motion a g 2 v 2 r displaystyle alpha gamma 2 frac v 2 r nbsp Acceleration edit Main article Acceleration The left hand circle in Figure 2 is the orbit showing the velocity vectors at two adjacent times On the right these two velocities are moved so their tails coincide Because speed is constant the velocity vectors on the right sweep out a circle as time advances For a swept angle d8 w dt the change in v is a vector at right angles to v and of magnitude v d8 which in turn means that the magnitude of the acceleration is given bya c v d 8 d t v w v 2 r displaystyle a c v frac d theta dt v omega frac v 2 r nbsp Centripetal acceleration for some values of radius and magnitude of velocity v r 1 m s3 6 km h2 2 mph 2 m s7 2 km h4 5 mph 5 m s18 km h11 mph 10 m s36 km h22 mph 20 m s72 km h45 mph 50 m s180 km h110 mph 100 m s360 km h220 mphSlow walk Bicycle City car Aerobatics10 cm3 9 in Laboratorycentrifuge 10 m s21 0 g 40 m s24 1 g 250 m s225 g 1 0 km s2100 g 4 0 km s2410 g 25 km s22500 g 100 km s210000 g20 cm7 9 in 5 0 m s20 51 g 20 m s22 0 g 130 m s213 g 500 m s251 g 2 0 km s2200 g 13 km s21300 g 50 km s25100 g50 cm1 6 ft 2 0 m s20 20 g 8 0 m s20 82 g 50 m s25 1 g 200 m s220 g 800 m s282 g 5 0 km s2510 g 20 km s22000 g1 m3 3 ft Playgroundcarousel 1 0 m s20 10 g 4 0 m s20 41 g 25 m s22 5 g 100 m s210 g 400 m s241 g 2 5 km s2250 g 10 km s21000 g2 m6 6 ft 500 mm s20 051 g 2 0 m s20 20 g 13 m s21 3 g 50 m s25 1 g 200 m s220 g 1 3 km s2130 g 5 0 km s2510 g5 m16 ft 200 mm s20 020 g 800 mm s20 082 g 5 0 m s20 51 g 20 m s22 0 g 80 m s28 2 g 500 m s251 g 2 0 km s2200 g10 m33 ft Roller coastervertical loop 100 mm s20 010 g 400 mm s20 041 g 2 5 m s20 25 g 10 m s21 0 g 40 m s24 1 g 250 m s225 g 1 0 km s2100 g20 m66 ft 50 mm s20 0051 g 200 mm s20 020 g 1 3 m s20 13 g 5 0 m s20 51 g 20 m s22 g 130 m s213 g 500 m s251 g50 m160 ft 20 mm s20 0020 g 80 mm s20 0082 g 500 mm s20 051 g 2 0 m s20 20 g 8 0 m s20 82 g 50 m s25 1 g 200 m s220 g100 m330 ft Freewayon ramp 10 mm s20 0010 g 40 mm s20 0041 g 250 mm s20 025 g 1 0 m s20 10 g 4 0 m s20 41 g 25 m s22 5 g 100 m s210 g200 m660 ft 5 0 mm s20 00051 g 20 mm s20 0020 g 130 m s20 013 g 500 mm s20 051 g 2 0 m s20 20 g 13 m s21 3 g 50 m s25 1 g500 m1600 ft 2 0 mm s20 00020 g 8 0 mm s20 00082 g 50 mm s20 0051 g 200 mm s20 020 g 800 mm s20 082 g 5 0 m s20 51 g 20 m s22 0 g1 km3300 ft High speedrailway 1 0 mm s20 00010 g 4 0 mm s20 00041 g 25 mm s20 0025 g 100 mm s20 010 g 400 mm s20 041 g 2 5 m s20 25 g 10 m s21 0 gNon uniform editThis section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions November 2019 nbsp In a non uniform circular motion an object is moving in a circular path with a varying speed Since the speed is changing there is tangential acceleration in addition to normal acceleration In a non uniform circular motion the net acceleration a is along the direction of Dv which is directed inside the circle but does not pass through its center see figure The net acceleration may be resolved into two components tangential acceleration and normal acceleration also known as the centripetal or radial acceleration Unlike tangential acceleration centripetal acceleration is present in both uniform and non uniform circular motion nbsp In a non uniform circular motion normal force does not always point in the opposite direction of weight Here is an example with an object traveling in a straight path then looping a loop back into a straight path again nbsp This diagram shows the normal force pointing in other directions rather than opposite to the weight force The normal force is actually the sum of the radial and tangential forces The component of weight force is responsible for the tangential force here We have neglected frictional force The radial force centripetal force is due to the change in the direction of velocity as discussed earlier In a non uniform circular motion normal force and weight may point in the same direction Both forces can point down yet the object will remain in a circular path without falling straight down First let s see why normal force can point down in the first place In the first diagram let s say the object is a person sitting inside a plane the two forces point down only when it reaches the top of the circle The reason for this is that the normal force is the sum of the tangential force and centripetal force The tangential force is zero at the top as no work is performed when the motion is perpendicular to the direction of force applied Here weight force is perpendicular to the direction of motion of the object at the top of the circle and centripetal force points down thus normal force will point down as well From a logical standpoint a person who is travelling in the plane will be upside down at the top of the circle At that moment the person s seat is actually pushing down on the person which is the normal force nbsp The reason why the object does not fall down when subjected to only downward forces is a simple one Think about what keeps an object up after it is thrown Once an object is thrown into the air there is only the downward force of Earth s gravity that acts on the object That does not mean that once an object is thrown in the air it will fall instantly What keeps that object up in the air is its velocity The first of Newton s laws of motion states that an object s inertia keeps it in motion and since the object in the air has a velocity it will tend to keep moving in that direction A varying angular speed for an object moving in a circular path can also be achieved if the rotating body does not have a homogeneous mass distribution For inhomogeneous objects it is necessary to approach the problem as in 2 Applications editSolving applications dealing with non uniform circular motion involves force analysis With a uniform circular motion the only force acting upon an object traveling in a circle is the centripetal force In a non uniform circular motion there are additional forces acting on the object due to a non zero tangential acceleration Although there are additional forces acting upon the object the sum of all the forces acting on the object will have to be equal to the centripetal force F net m a m a r m v 2 r F c displaystyle begin aligned F text net amp ma amp ma r amp frac mv 2 r amp F c end aligned nbsp Radial acceleration is used when calculating the total force Tangential acceleration is not used in calculating total force because it is not responsible for keeping the object in a circular path The only acceleration responsible for keeping an object moving in a circle is the radial acceleration Since the sum of all forces is the centripetal force drawing centripetal force into a free body diagram is not necessary and usually not recommended Using F net F c displaystyle F text net F c nbsp we can draw free body diagrams to list all the forces acting on an object and then set it equal to F c displaystyle F c nbsp Afterward we can solve for whatever is unknown this can be mass velocity radius of curvature coefficient of friction normal force etc For example the visual above showing an object at the top of a semicircle would be expressed as F c n m g displaystyle F c n mg nbsp In a uniform circular motion the total acceleration of an object in a circular path is equal to the radial acceleration Due to the presence of tangential acceleration in a non uniform circular motion that does not hold true any more To find the total acceleration of an object in a non uniform circular find the vector sum of the tangential acceleration and the radial acceleration a r 2 a t 2 a displaystyle sqrt a r 2 a t 2 a nbsp Radial acceleration is still equal to v 2 r textstyle frac v 2 r nbsp Tangential acceleration is simply the derivative of the speed at any given point a t d v d t textstyle a t frac dv dt nbsp This root sum of squares of separate radial and tangential accelerations is only correct for circular motion for general motion within a plane with polar coordinates r 8 displaystyle r theta nbsp the Coriolis term a c 2 d r d t d 8 d t textstyle a c 2 left frac dr dt right left frac d theta dt right nbsp should be added to a t displaystyle a t nbsp whereas radial acceleration then becomes a r v 2 r d 2 r d t 2 textstyle a r frac v 2 r frac d 2 r dt 2 nbsp See also editAngular momentum Equations of motion for circular motion Time derivative Example circular motion Fictitious force Geostationary orbit Geosynchronous orbit Pendulum mechanics Reactive centrifugal force Reciprocating motion Simple harmonic motion Uniform circular motion Sling weapon References edit Knudsen Jens M Hjorth Poul G 2000 Elements of Newtonian mechanics including nonlinear dynamics 3 ed Springer p 96 ISBN 3 540 67652 X Gomez R W Hernandez Gomez J J Marquina V 25 July 2012 A jumping cylinder on an inclined plane Eur J Phys IOP 33 5 1359 1365 arXiv 1204 0600 Bibcode 2012EJPh 33 1359G doi 10 1088 0143 0807 33 5 1359 S2CID 55442794 Retrieved 25 April 2016 External links editPhysclips Mechanics with animations and video clips from the University of New South Wales Circular Motion a chapter from an online textbook Mechanics by Benjamin Crowell 2019 Circular Motion Lecture a video lecture on CM 1 an online textbook with different analysis for circular motion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circular motion amp oldid 1189170014, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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