Title: Circular motion and the law of Gravity
1Circular motion and the law of Gravity
2Angular displacement
- Difference between final and initial angles
- SI unit radian (rad)
- Counterclockwise rotation is positive by
definition
3Units
- Angles are sometimes expressed in degrees
- 180º p rad 3.1415rad
- 1 rad 180/p 57.295º
- 1 turn is 2p 360º
- The point can rotate by more than one turn, for
example if it does 2.5 turns, the angular
displacement is
4Angular velocity
- Average angular velocity
- SI unit rad/s
- The angular velocity tells you how fast an object
is rotating. It is sometimes expressed in rpm
(rotation per minute) - 1 rpm 2p/60 0.1047rad/s
5example
- An engine is rotating at 10.0 rpm. What is the
angular displacement after 2.00 minutes of
running? - A) 5.00 rad
- B) 10.0 rad
- C) 126 rad
- D) 1200 rad
6example
- An engine is rotating at 10.0 rpm. What is the
angular displacement after 2.00 minutes of
running? - A) 5.00 rad
- B) 10.0 rad
- C) 126 rad
- D) 1200 rad
7Angular acceleration
- Average angular acceleration
- SI unit rad/s2
- The angular acceleration tells you how much the
angular velocity is changing through time. For
example when you accelerate in your car, the
wheels rotate more and more rapidly. -
8example
- An engine rotates initially at 5000 rpm, it is
shut off and its rotation speed decreases
continuously until it comes to rest after 5.000
minutes. What was the average angular
acceleration? - A) -1.745 rad/s2
- B) -16.67 rad/s2
- C) 0.000 rad/s2
- D) 16.67 rad/s2
- E) 1000 rad/s2
9example
- An engine rotates initially at 5000 rpm, it is
shut off and its rotation speed decreases
continuously until it comes to rest after 5.000
minutes. What was the average angular
acceleration? - A) -1.745 rad/s2
- B) -16.67 rad/s2
- C) 0.000 rad/s2
- D) 16.67 rad/s2
- E) 1000 rad/s2
10Displacement and angular displacement
- For a point on a circle of radius r, the
displacement Ds along the circular path is - SI units
- Ds meter (m)
- r meter (m)
- Dq radian (rad)
11Tangential velocity and angular velocity
- tangential velocity and angular velocity are not
the same thing - An object moves on a circle of radius r2.0 m at
an angular velocity w10 rad/s. Its velocity is
12Rotation of an object
- For a solid object rotating
- All the points of the object have equal angular
velocity - The points farther away from the axis of rotation
have greater tangential velocity
13Geostationary satellite
- There is an orbit around earth for which a
satellite rotates at the same angular velocity
than the earth (both do one rotation in 24h). - The earth has a radius RE6400 km and the
geostationary orbit is at a radius Rg42 000 km.
How much faster is the satellite speed compared
to the speed of a point on earths surface?
14Acceleration and angular acceleration
- Tangential acceleration and angular acceleration
are not the same thing
15Linear and rotational motions
Rotational
position
angular position
velocity
angular velocity
acceleration
angular acceleration
16Units comparison
Rotational
m
rad
m/s
rad/s
m/s2
rad/s2
17Multiply by r to go from angular quantities to
tangential quantities
m
rad
m/s
rad/s
m/s2
rad/s2
Ds is the displacement in meters of the point
moving on a circle (see next slides to understand
the meaning of tangential)
18Similarities with kinematics relations
- There is a direct parallel between linear motion
and rotational motion, for example
19Lawn mower
- You turn on your lawn mower in your backyard. The
blades accelerates continuously for Dt3.00s
until they reach a rotational speed of 3000 rpm.
What has been the total angular displacement
during that time? - A) 471 rad
- B) 942 rad
- C) 1.88103 rad
20Lawn mower
- You turn on your lawn mower in your backyard. The
blades accelerates continuously for Dt3.00s
until they reach a rotational speed of 3000 rpm.
What has been the total angular displacement
during that time? - A) 471 rad
- B) 942 rad
- C) 1.88103 rad
21Rolling coin
- A coin has initial angular velocity wi10 rad/s
and slows down with a-2.0 rad/s2 until it is at
rest. What has been the angular displacement ? If
the coin has a radius of 1.0 cm, how far did it
roll? - A) 20 rad 0.20 m
- B) 25 rad 0.25 m
- C) 40 rad 0.40 m
22Rolling coin
- A coin has initial angular velocity wi10 rad/s
and slows down with a-2.0 rad/s2 until it is at
rest. What has been the angular displacement ? If
the coin has a radius of 1.0 cm, how far did it
roll?
B) 25 rad 0.25 m
23Periodicity of repetitive circular motion
- A repetitive circular motion has a period of
revolution, which menas the time (in seconds) it
takes the object to do one full turn, it is
usually noted with capital T letter - Lets imagine an object does 5 rotations per
second. Its angular velocity and period are
24Frequency of repetitive circular motion
- A repetitive circular motion has a period of
revolution T, and a frequency f linked by - T in seconds, f is in Hz (Hertz) which is
nothing else than 1/s - the frequency f tells us how many turns are being
done every second - In the example from the previous slide, the
object was doing 5 turns per seconds so - f 5Hz
25Circular motion
- We know that the acceleration is the change of
the velocity vector through time - If an object rotates on a circle at constant
speed, - the magnitude of v is constant
- but the direction of v changes and a?0
26Centripetal acceleration
- For circular motion at constant speed, what is
the direction and magnitude of the acceleration ? - Consider a small duration Dt
- Similar triangles
27Centripetal acceleration
- We found two things for circular motion at
constant speed - acceleration points toward the center of the
circle (thats why its called centripetal) - Magnitude of acceleration is v2/r
v
ac
28Example - ac
- A bicycle wheel is in the shop to service its
brakes. The wheel is spinning freely at a
constant speed. - You estimate the wheel does half a rotation in
one second - What is the centripetal acceleration of a point
on the tire if the wheel is 50 cm in radius?
A) 0.0 m/s2 B) 4.9 m/s2 C) 9.8 m/s2
29Example - ac
A) 0.0 m/s2 B) 4.9 m/s2 C) 9.8 m/s2
30Tangential centripetal acceleration
- When an object accelerates on a circular
trajectory, its tangential velocity changes and
we had found - Where we used the subscript t for tangential to
distinguish it from centripetal acceleration
- Object on a circular motion with centripetal and
tangential acceleration (object can accelerate
or decelerate along the circular trajectory )
31Example ac and at
- A friend is on merry-go-round initially rotating
with wi2.0 rad/s and at r2.0 m - You decide to speed-up the rotation and provide
an angular acceleration of a1.0 rad/s2 for 1.0
second - What is the amplitude of the acceleration
experienced by your friend after you are done?
- A) 4.0 m/s2
- B) 9.0 m/s2
- 18 m/s2
- 36 m/s2
32- A) 4.0 m/s2
- B) 9.0 m/s2
- 18 m/s2
- 36 m/s2
33Force causing ac
- For an object undergoing a circular motion at
constant speed, Newtons 2nd law requires that a
force provides the centripetal acceleration
Fnetmacmv2/r . Example - Gravitation force
- Tension in a rotating rope
- Friction between tires and road
- Normal force
- .
34Example - F
- A mass m12.0 kg is rotating at constant speed on
a horizontal plane with radius R1.0 m. The mass
is attached through a rope to another mass m21.0
kg hanging vertically - What is the tension in the rope and the speed of
m1?
- A) 9.8 N 2.2 m/s
- B) 9.8 N 4.9 m/s
- 20 N 2.2 m/s
- 20 N 4.9 m/s
35- A) 9.8 N 2.2 m/s
- B) 9.8 N 4.9 m/s
- 20 N 2.2 m/s
- 20 N 4.9 m/s
T
Tm2g
Fg,2-m2g
36Conical pendulum
- The pendulum is rotating at constant speed around
the vertical axis - What is its speed if the length of the string is
50 cm and the angle w.r.t. the vertical axis is
45º?
37L
- The forces acting on the mass are gravity and the
tension in the string - The mass is not moving vertically
- The mass is rotating horizontally
- Speed is constant
Tsinq
Tcosq
T
-mg
38Car through a bend
- A car is on a level road and goes around a
circular bend of radius R50 m at a speed of 30.0
mi/h - The centripetal force is provided by static
friction between the tires and the road - What is the minimum ms needed so that the car
doesnt slide?
39 40Car in a banked curve
- A car is turning in a frictionless banked curve
with a bend radius R100m at an angle of 45º with
the horizontal - What must be the speed of the car to make it
through on a circular path of radius R?
- Not possible
- 31 m/s
- C) 41 m/s
- D) 51 m/s
41- Not possible
- 31 m/s
- C) 41 m/s
- D) 51 m/s
42Car in a banked curve with friction
- A car is turning banked curve with a bend radius
R100m at an angle of 45º with the horizontal - The coefficient of static friction between the
tires and the road is ms0.50 - What is the maximum speed of the car to avoid
sliding in the curve?
- Not possible
- 34 m/s
- C) 44 m/s
- D) 54 m/s
43Fscosq
Fssinq
D) 54 m/s
Fs
Fs points down because the car goes faster than
the nominal 31 m/s
44Car in a banked curve with friction
- A car is turning banked curve with a bend radius
R100m at an angle of 45º with the horizontal - The coefficient of static friction between the
tires and the road is ms0.50 - What is the minimum speed of the car to avoid
sliding in the curve?
45Fs
Fssinq
Fs points up because the car goes slower than the
nominal 31 m/s and without friction the car would
slide down the bank
Fscosq
46Gravitation (take 2)
- At the surface of the Earth
- ME 6.0 1024 kg
- RE 6.4 106 m
47Approximation near earths surface
- Lets see how good was our approximation of a
constant gravitational acceleration near the
Earths surface - Acceleration of a mass m at a height h above
Earths surface is -
- On Earth surface
- 100 m above surface
- 1000 m away from Earths surface
- 1000 km away from Earth surface
- Apprimation is good when h/RE very small (ltlt1)
48Synchronous orbit
- We had said that an object located at r42 000 km
from the Earth center would always stay at the
same position in the sky (so called synchronous
or geostationary orbit), lets prove it!
49Gravitational Potential Energy (GPE)
- Near Earths surface we had define
- This formula is only a good approximation when h
is small compared to Earths radius - In general, GPE of an object at distance r from
Earths center is - Remember that important quantity is not GPE but
DGPE, the change in GPE
50Escape speed
- Now that we have a more precise formula for the
gravitational potential energy, we can calculate
the velocity that an object would need to have
when launched from a planet to never fall back on
it - Initially, the object is on the planets surface,
at the end it is infinitely far from it and at
rest -
51Escape speed
- We apply conservation of energy
- After some algebra we find
- Calculating for Earth we would find vesc11.2
km/s
52Scaling tip
- In some problem you are asked how a quantity
scales when you change some parameters by some
coefficient - For example one could ask, how does the escape
velocity vary for a planetX which is 4 times as
heavy as Earth and with a radius twice as big? - The trick is to express these parameters as
- MX4ME
- RX2RE
- Then take general formula and replace, et voila
53Keplers laws
- Three Keplers laws describe the motion of
planets around the Sun - 1) All planets move on elliptical orbits with the
sun as one focal point - 2) A line drawn from the Sun to any planet sweeps
out equal areas in equal time intervals - 3) The square of the orbital period of any planet
is proportional to the cube of the average
distance form the planet to the sun - Average distance from a planet to the sun on an
elliptical orbit is equal to the semi-major axis
of the ellipse
54Ellipses
- Circle distance to a given
- point is constant
- Ellipse Sum of distances from two points ( the
two focal points) is constant
average distance from planet to focal
point (important for Keplers 3rd law)
pq constant
55Keplers laws
- First Law
- Consequence of force proportional to 1/r2
- Second Law
- AreaSABAreaSCD if
- DtABDtCD
56Keplers laws
- Third law
- Can be easily proven for circular orbit
- Assume planet of mass MP on a circular orbit of
radius r around the Sun of mass MS
- T is the time the planet takes to do one
revolution around the sun
57Homework (help)
- Using Keplers third law for this planet of mass
MP and since orbit is at radius RP - Rearranging to get
- The planet is a uniform sphere of density
- Use
these eq. to find r