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Rolling

Rolling is a type of motion that combines rotation (commonly, of an axially symmetric object) and translation of that object with respect to a surface (either one or the other moves), such that, if ideal conditions exist, the two are in contact with each other without sliding.

The animation illustrates rolling motion of a wheel as a superposition of two motions: translation with respect to the surface, and rotation around its own axis.

Rolling where there is no sliding is referred to as pure rolling. By definition, there is no sliding when there is a frame of reference in which all points of contact on the rolling object have the same velocity as their counterparts on the surface on which the object rolls; in particular, for a frame of reference in which the rolling plane is at rest (see animation), the instantaneous velocity of all the points of contact (for instance, a generating line segment of a cylinder) of the rolling object is zero.

In practice, due to small deformations near the contact area, some sliding and energy dissipation occurs. Nevertheless, the resulting rolling resistance is much lower than sliding friction, and thus, rolling objects, typically require much less energy to be moved than sliding ones. As a result, such objects will more easily move, if they experience a force with a component along the surface, for instance gravity on a tilted surface, wind, pushing, pulling, or torque from an engine. Unlike cylindrical axially symmetric objects, the rolling motion of a cone is such that while rolling on a flat surface, its center of gravity performs a circular motion, rather than a linear motion. Rolling objects are not necessarily axially-symmetrical. Two well known non-axially-symmetrical rollers are the Reuleaux triangle and the Meissner bodies. The oloid and the sphericon are members of a special family of developable rollers that develop their entire surface when rolling down a flat plane. Objects with corners, such as dice, roll by successive rotations about the edge or corner which is in contact with the surface. The construction of a specific surface allows even a perfect square wheel to roll with its centroid at constant height above a reference plane.

Applications edit

Most land vehicles use wheels and therefore rolling for displacement. Slip should be kept to a minimum (approximating pure rolling), otherwise loss of control and an accident may result. This may happen when the road is covered in snow, sand, or oil, when taking a turn at high speed or attempting to brake or accelerate suddenly.

One of the most practical applications of rolling objects is the use of rolling-element bearings, such as ball bearings, in rotating devices. Made of metal, the rolling elements are usually encased between two rings that can rotate independently of each other. In most mechanisms, the inner ring is attached to a stationary shaft (or axle). Thus, while the inner ring is stationary, the outer ring is free to move with very little friction. This is the basis for which almost all motors (such as those found in ceiling fans, cars, drills, etc.) rely on to operate. Alternatively, the outer ring may be attached to a fixed support bracket, allowing the inner ring to support an axle, allowing for rotational freedom of an axle. The amount of friction on the mechanism's parts depends on the quality of the ball bearings and how much lubrication is in the mechanism.

Rolling objects are also frequently used as tools for transportation. One of the most basic ways is by placing a (usually flat) object on a series of lined-up rollers, or wheels. The object on the wheels can be moved along them in a straight line, as long as the wheels are continuously replaced in the front (see history of bearings). This method of primitive transportation is efficient when no other machinery is available. Today, the most practical application of objects on wheels are cars, trains, and other human transportation vehicles.

Physics of simple rolling edit

 
 
The velocities of the points of a rolling object are equal to those of rotation around the point of contact.

The simplest case of rolling is that of rolling without slipping along a flat surface with its axis parallel to the surface (or equivalently: perpendicular to the surface normal).

The trajectory of any point is a trochoid; in particular, the trajectory of any point in the object axis is a line, while the trajectory of any point in the object rim is a cycloid.

The velocity of any point in the rolling object is given by  , where   is the displacement between the particle and the rolling object's contact point (or line) with the surface, and ω is the angular velocity vector. Thus, despite that rolling is different from rotation around a fixed axis, the instantaneous velocity of all particles of the rolling object is the same as if it was rotating around an axis that passes through the point of contact with the same angular velocity.

Any point in the rolling object farther from the axis than the point of contact will temporarily move opposite to the direction of the overall motion when it is below the level of the rolling surface (for example, any point in the part of the flange of a train wheel that is below the rail).

Energy edit

Since kinetic energy is entirely a function of an object mass and velocity, the above result may be used with the parallel axis theorem to obtain the kinetic energy associated with simple rolling

 
Derivation

Let   be the distance between the center of mass and the point of contact; when the surface is flat, this is the radius of the object around its widest cross section. Since the center of mass has an immediate velocity as if it was rotating around the point of contact, its velocity is  . Due to symmetry, the object center of mass is a point in its axis. Let   be inertia of pure rotation around the axis of symmetry, then according to the parallel axis theorem, the rotational inertia associated with rolling is   (same as the rotational inertia of pure rotation around the point of contact). Using the general formula for kinetic energy of rotation, we have:

 

Forces and acceleration edit

Differentiating the relation between linear and angular velocity,  , with respect to time gives a formula relating linear and angular acceleration  . Applying Newton's second law:

 

It follows that to accelerate the object, both a net force and a torque are required. When external force with no torque acts on the rolling object‐surface system, there will be a tangential force at the point of contact between the surface and rolling object that provides the required torque as long as the motion is pure rolling; this force is usually static friction, for example, between the road and a wheel or between a bowling lane and a bowling ball. When static friction isn't enough, the friction becomes dynamic friction and slipping happens. The tangential force is opposite in direction to the external force, and therefore partially cancels it. The resulting net force and acceleration are:

 
Derivation

Assume that the object experiences an external force   which exerts no torque (it has 0 moment arm), static friction at the point of contact ( ) provides the torque and the other forces involved cancel.   is tangential to the object and surface at the point of contact and opposite in direction to  . Using the sign convention by which this force is positive, the net force is:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Because there is no slip,   holds. Substituting   and   for the linear and rotational version of Newton's second law, then solving for  :

 

Expanding   in  :

 

The last equality is the first formula for  ; using it together with Newton's second law, then reducing, the formula for   is obtained:

 

The radius of gyration can be incorporated in the first formula for   as follows:

 

Substituting the latest equality above in the first formula for   the second formula for it:

 

  has dimension of mass, and it is the mass that would have a rotational inertia   at distance   from an axis of rotation. Therefore, the term   may be thought of as the mass with linear inertia equivalent to the rolling object rotational inertia (around its center of mass). The action of the external force upon an object in simple rotation may be conceptualized as accelerating the sum of the real mass and the virtual mass that represents the rotational inertia, which is  . Since the work done by the external force is split between overcoming the translational and rotational inertia, the external force results in a smaller net force by the dimensionless multiplicative factor   where   represents the ratio of the aforesaid virtual mass to the object actual mass and it is equal to   where   is the radius of gyration corresponding to the object rotational inertia in pure rotation (not the rotational inertia in pure rolling). The square power is due to the fact rotational inertia of a point mass varies proportionally to the square of its distance to the axis.

Four objects in pure rolling racing down a plane with no air drag. From back to front: spherical shell (red), solid sphere (orange), cylindrical ring (green) and solid cylinder (blue). The time to reach the finishing line is entirely a function of the object mass distribution, slope and gravitational acceleration. See details, animated GIF version.

In the specific case of an object rolling in an inclined plane which experiences only static friction, normal force and its own weight, (air drag is absent) the acceleration in the direction of rolling down the slope is:

 
Derivation

Assuming that the object is placed so as to roll downward in the direction of the inclined plane (and not partially sideways), the weight can be decomposed in a component in the direction of rolling and a component perpendicular to the inclined plane. Only the first force component makes the object roll, the second is balanced by the contact force, but it does not form an action‐reaction pair with it (just as an object in rest on a table). Therefore, for this analysis, only the first component is considered, thus:

 
 

In the last equality the denominator is the same as in the formula for force, but the factor   disappears because its instance in the force of gravity cancels with its instance due to Newton's third law.

  is specific to the object shape and mass distribution, it does not depend on scale or density. However, it will vary if the object is made to roll with different radiuses; for instance, it varies between a train wheel set rolling normally (by its tire), and by its axle. It follows that given a reference rolling object, another object bigger or with different density will roll with the same acceleration. This behavior is the same as that of an object in free fall or an object sliding without friction (instead of rolling) down an inclined plane.

Deformable bodies edit

When an axisymmetric deformable body contacts a surface, an interface is formed through which normal and shear forces may be transmitted. For example, a tire contacting the road carries the weight (normal load) of the car as well as any shear forces arising due to acceleration, braking or steering. The deformations and motions in a steady rolling body can be efficiently characterized using an Eulerian description of rigid body rotation and a Lagrangian description of deformation.[1][2] This approach greatly simplifies analysis by eliminating time-dependence, resulting in displacement, velocity, stress and strain fields that vary only spatially. Analysis procedures for finite element analysis of steady state rolling were first developed by Padovan, and are now featured in several commercial codes.

References edit

Halliday, David; Resnick, Robert (2014), Fundamentals of Physics, Chapters 9: Wiley{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location (link)

  1. ^ Padovan, J.; Zeid, I. (1980). "Finite element modeling of rolling contact". Computers & Structures. 12 (1): 77–83. doi:10.1016/0045-7949(80)90095-4. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  2. ^ Qi, J.; Herron, J. R.; Sansalone, K. H.; Mars, W. V.; Du, Z. Z.; Snyman, M.; Surendranath, H. (2007). "Validation of a Steady-State Transport Analysis for Rolling Treaded Tires". Tire Science and Technology. 35 (3): 183–208. doi:10.2346/1.2768974. Retrieved 28 December 2022.

See also edit

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For other uses see Rolling disambiguation This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rolling is a type of motion that combines rotation commonly of an axially symmetric object and translation of that object with respect to a surface either one or the other moves such that if ideal conditions exist the two are in contact with each other without sliding The animation illustrates rolling motion of a wheel as a superposition of two motions translation with respect to the surface and rotation around its own axis Rolling where there is no sliding is referred to as pure rolling By definition there is no sliding when there is a frame of reference in which all points of contact on the rolling object have the same velocity as their counterparts on the surface on which the object rolls in particular for a frame of reference in which the rolling plane is at rest see animation the instantaneous velocity of all the points of contact for instance a generating line segment of a cylinder of the rolling object is zero In practice due to small deformations near the contact area some sliding and energy dissipation occurs Nevertheless the resulting rolling resistance is much lower than sliding friction and thus rolling objects typically require much less energy to be moved than sliding ones As a result such objects will more easily move if they experience a force with a component along the surface for instance gravity on a tilted surface wind pushing pulling or torque from an engine Unlike cylindrical axially symmetric objects the rolling motion of a cone is such that while rolling on a flat surface its center of gravity performs a circular motion rather than a linear motion Rolling objects are not necessarily axially symmetrical Two well known non axially symmetrical rollers are the Reuleaux triangle and the Meissner bodies The oloid and the sphericon are members of a special family of developable rollers that develop their entire surface when rolling down a flat plane Objects with corners such as dice roll by successive rotations about the edge or corner which is in contact with the surface The construction of a specific surface allows even a perfect square wheel to roll with its centroid at constant height above a reference plane Contents 1 Applications 2 Physics of simple rolling 2 1 Energy 2 2 Forces and acceleration 3 Deformable bodies 4 References 5 See alsoApplications editMost land vehicles use wheels and therefore rolling for displacement Slip should be kept to a minimum approximating pure rolling otherwise loss of control and an accident may result This may happen when the road is covered in snow sand or oil when taking a turn at high speed or attempting to brake or accelerate suddenly One of the most practical applications of rolling objects is the use of rolling element bearings such as ball bearings in rotating devices Made of metal the rolling elements are usually encased between two rings that can rotate independently of each other In most mechanisms the inner ring is attached to a stationary shaft or axle Thus while the inner ring is stationary the outer ring is free to move with very little friction This is the basis for which almost all motors such as those found in ceiling fans cars drills etc rely on to operate Alternatively the outer ring may be attached to a fixed support bracket allowing the inner ring to support an axle allowing for rotational freedom of an axle The amount of friction on the mechanism s parts depends on the quality of the ball bearings and how much lubrication is in the mechanism Rolling objects are also frequently used as tools for transportation One of the most basic ways is by placing a usually flat object on a series of lined up rollers or wheels The object on the wheels can be moved along them in a straight line as long as the wheels are continuously replaced in the front see history of bearings This method of primitive transportation is efficient when no other machinery is available Today the most practical application of objects on wheels are cars trains and other human transportation vehicles Physics of simple rolling edit nbsp nbsp The velocities of the points of a rolling object are equal to those of rotation around the point of contact The simplest case of rolling is that of rolling without slipping along a flat surface with its axis parallel to the surface or equivalently perpendicular to the surface normal The trajectory of any point is a trochoid in particular the trajectory of any point in the object axis is a line while the trajectory of any point in the object rim is a cycloid The velocity of any point in the rolling object is given by v w r displaystyle mathbf v boldsymbol omega times mathbf r nbsp where r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp is the displacement between the particle and the rolling object s contact point or line with the surface and w is the angular velocity vector Thus despite that rolling is different from rotation around a fixed axis the instantaneous velocity of all particles of the rolling object is the same as if it was rotating around an axis that passes through the point of contact with the same angular velocity Any point in the rolling object farther from the axis than the point of contact will temporarily move opposite to the direction of the overall motion when it is below the level of the rolling surface for example any point in the part of the flange of a train wheel that is below the rail Energy edit Since kinetic energy is entirely a function of an object mass and velocity the above result may be used with the parallel axis theorem to obtain the kinetic energy associated with simple rolling K rolling K translation K rotation displaystyle K text rolling K text translation K text rotation nbsp DerivationFurther information Rotation around a fixed axis Let r displaystyle r nbsp be the distance between the center of mass and the point of contact when the surface is flat this is the radius of the object around its widest cross section Since the center of mass has an immediate velocity as if it was rotating around the point of contact its velocity is v c o m r w displaystyle v text c o m r omega nbsp Due to symmetry the object center of mass is a point in its axis Let I rotation displaystyle I text rotation nbsp be inertia of pure rotation around the axis of symmetry then according to the parallel axis theorem the rotational inertia associated with rolling is I rolling m r 2 I rotation displaystyle I text rolling mr 2 I text rotation nbsp same as the rotational inertia of pure rotation around the point of contact Using the general formula for kinetic energy of rotation we have K rolling 1 2 I rolling w 2 1 2 m r 2 w 2 1 2 I rotation w 2 1 2 m r w 2 1 2 I rotation w 2 1 2 m v c o m 2 1 2 I rotation w 2 K translation K rotation displaystyle begin aligned K text rolling amp frac 1 2 I text rolling omega 2 amp frac 1 2 mr 2 omega 2 frac 1 2 I text rotation omega 2 amp frac 1 2 m r omega 2 frac 1 2 I text rotation omega 2 amp frac 1 2 mv text c o m 2 frac 1 2 I text rotation omega 2 amp K text translation K text rotation end aligned nbsp Forces and acceleration edit Differentiating the relation between linear and angular velocity v c o m r w displaystyle v text c o m r omega nbsp with respect to time gives a formula relating linear and angular acceleration a r a displaystyle a r alpha nbsp Applying Newton s second law a F net m r a r t I displaystyle a frac F text net m r alpha frac r tau I nbsp It follows that to accelerate the object both a net force and a torque are required When external force with no torque acts on the rolling object surface system there will be a tangential force at the point of contact between the surface and rolling object that provides the required torque as long as the motion is pure rolling this force is usually static friction for example between the road and a wheel or between a bowling lane and a bowling ball When static friction isn t enough the friction becomes dynamic friction and slipping happens The tangential force is opposite in direction to the external force and therefore partially cancels it The resulting net force and acceleration are F net F external 1 I m r 2 F external 1 r gyr r 2 a F external m I r 2 displaystyle begin aligned F text net amp frac F text external 1 frac I mr 2 frac F text external 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 a amp frac F text external m frac I r 2 end aligned nbsp DerivationAssume that the object experiences an external force F external displaystyle F text external nbsp which exerts no torque it has 0 moment arm static friction at the point of contact F friction displaystyle F text friction nbsp provides the torque and the other forces involved cancel F friction displaystyle F text friction nbsp is tangential to the object and surface at the point of contact and opposite in direction to F external displaystyle F text external nbsp Using the sign convention by which this force is positive the net force is F net F external F friction displaystyle F text net F text external F text friction nbsp 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp Because there is no slip r a a displaystyle r alpha a nbsp holds Substituting a displaystyle alpha nbsp and a displaystyle a nbsp for the linear and rotational version of Newton s second law then solving for F friction displaystyle F text friction nbsp r t I F net m r r F friction I F net m F friction I F net m r 2 displaystyle begin aligned r frac tau I amp frac F text net m r frac rF text friction I amp frac F text net m F text friction amp frac IF text net mr 2 end aligned nbsp Expanding F friction displaystyle F text friction nbsp in 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp F net F external I F net m r 2 F external I m r 2 F net F external 1 I m r 2 displaystyle begin aligned F text net amp F text external frac IF text net mr 2 amp F text external frac I mr 2 F text net amp frac F text external 1 frac I mr 2 end aligned nbsp The last equality is the first formula for F net displaystyle F text net nbsp using it together with Newton s second law then reducing the formula for a displaystyle a nbsp is obtained a F net m F external 1 I m r 2 m F external m 1 I m r 2 F external m I r 2 displaystyle begin aligned a amp frac F text net m amp frac left frac F text external 1 frac I mr 2 right m amp frac F text external m left 1 frac I mr 2 right amp frac F text external m frac I r 2 end aligned nbsp The radius of gyration can be incorporated in the first formula for F net displaystyle F text net nbsp as follows r gyr I m r gyr 2 I m I m r 2 I m r 2 r gyr 2 r 2 r gyr r 2 displaystyle begin aligned r text gyr amp sqrt frac I m r text gyr 2 amp frac I m frac I mr 2 amp frac left frac I m right r 2 amp frac r text gyr 2 r 2 amp left frac r text gyr r right 2 end aligned nbsp Substituting the latest equality above in the first formula for F net displaystyle F text net nbsp the second formula for it F net F external 1 r gyr r 2 displaystyle F text net frac F text external 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 nbsp I r 2 displaystyle tfrac I r 2 nbsp has dimension of mass and it is the mass that would have a rotational inertia I displaystyle I nbsp at distance r displaystyle r nbsp from an axis of rotation Therefore the term I r 2 displaystyle tfrac I r 2 nbsp may be thought of as the mass with linear inertia equivalent to the rolling object rotational inertia around its center of mass The action of the external force upon an object in simple rotation may be conceptualized as accelerating the sum of the real mass and the virtual mass that represents the rotational inertia which is m I r 2 displaystyle m tfrac I r 2 nbsp Since the work done by the external force is split between overcoming the translational and rotational inertia the external force results in a smaller net force by the dimensionless multiplicative factor 1 1 I m r 2 displaystyle 1 left 1 tfrac I mr 2 right nbsp where I m r 2 displaystyle tfrac I mr 2 nbsp represents the ratio of the aforesaid virtual mass to the object actual mass and it is equal to r gyr r 2 displaystyle left tfrac r text gyr r right 2 nbsp where r gyr displaystyle r text gyr nbsp is the radius of gyration corresponding to the object rotational inertia in pure rotation not the rotational inertia in pure rolling The square power is due to the fact rotational inertia of a point mass varies proportionally to the square of its distance to the axis source source source source Four objects in pure rolling racing down a plane with no air drag From back to front spherical shell red solid sphere orange cylindrical ring green and solid cylinder blue The time to reach the finishing line is entirely a function of the object mass distribution slope and gravitational acceleration See details animated GIF version In the specific case of an object rolling in an inclined plane which experiences only static friction normal force and its own weight air drag is absent the acceleration in the direction of rolling down the slope is a g sin 8 1 r gyr r 2 displaystyle a frac g sin left theta right 1 left tfrac r text gyr r right 2 nbsp DerivationAssuming that the object is placed so as to roll downward in the direction of the inclined plane and not partially sideways the weight can be decomposed in a component in the direction of rolling and a component perpendicular to the inclined plane Only the first force component makes the object roll the second is balanced by the contact force but it does not form an action reaction pair with it just as an object in rest on a table Therefore for this analysis only the first component is considered thus F external g m sin 8 displaystyle F text external gm sin left theta right nbsp a F net m F external 1 r gyr r 2 m g m sin 8 1 r gyr r 2 m g m sin 8 m 1 r gyr r 2 g sin 8 1 r gyr r 2 displaystyle begin aligned a amp frac F text net m amp frac left frac F text external 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 right m amp frac left frac gm sin left theta right 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 right m amp frac gm sin left theta right m left 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 right amp frac g sin left theta right 1 left frac r text gyr r right 2 end aligned nbsp In the last equality the denominator is the same as in the formula for force but the factor m displaystyle m nbsp disappears because its instance in the force of gravity cancels with its instance due to Newton s third law r gyr r displaystyle tfrac r text gyr r nbsp is specific to the object shape and mass distribution it does not depend on scale or density However it will vary if the object is made to roll with different radiuses for instance it varies between a train wheel set rolling normally by its tire and by its axle It follows that given a reference rolling object another object bigger or with different density will roll with the same acceleration This behavior is the same as that of an object in free fall or an object sliding without friction instead of rolling down an inclined plane Deformable bodies editWhen an axisymmetric deformable body contacts a surface an interface is formed through which normal and shear forces may be transmitted For example a tire contacting the road carries the weight normal load of the car as well as any shear forces arising due to acceleration braking or steering The deformations and motions in a steady rolling body can be efficiently characterized using an Eulerian description of rigid body rotation and a Lagrangian description of deformation 1 2 This approach greatly simplifies analysis by eliminating time dependence resulting in displacement velocity stress and strain fields that vary only spatially Analysis procedures for finite element analysis of steady state rolling were first developed by Padovan and are now featured in several commercial codes References editHalliday David Resnick Robert 2014 Fundamentals of Physics Chapters 9 Wiley a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location link Padovan J Zeid I 1980 Finite element modeling of rolling contact Computers amp Structures 12 1 77 83 doi 10 1016 0045 7949 80 90095 4 Retrieved 28 December 2022 Qi J Herron J R Sansalone K H Mars W V Du Z Z Snyman M Surendranath H 2007 Validation of a Steady State Transport Analysis for Rolling Treaded Tires Tire Science and Technology 35 3 183 208 doi 10 2346 1 2768974 Retrieved 28 December 2022 See also editRolling resistance Frictional contact mechanics Rolling contact Terrestrial locomotion in animals Rolling Plantigrade Leg mechanism Tumbling gymnastics Roulette curve Trochoid Cycloid Gear Rack and pinion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rolling amp oldid 1193938301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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