Title: Going in circles
1Going in circles
a
v
Why is circular motion cool?
you get accelerated! (due to change in direction)
2Circular Motion in Our Daily Lives
- Driving around curves banks
- Amusement park rides (loops circles)
- Weather patterns (jet streams, coriolis effect)
3Horizontal Circles (Rotor)
Friction between Bart and wall
wall pushing in on Bart
Barts weight
The inward wall force keeps Bart in the
circle. Friction keeps him from falling down.
4vertical circles
- Track provides centripetal force
- You feel heavier at bottom since larger
centripetal force needed to battle gravity - You feel lighter on top since gravity helps the
track push you down
5Angled turns wings provide centripetal
forcefeel heavier if go faster in a tighter turn
6- Earth rotates in a tilted circle
- -high speed (800 mph), but small
acceleration - (adds
.1 extra gravity) -
-
- -west
to east motion - curves
south
(Coriolis effect- ) -
7Uniform circular motion
The speed stays constant, but the direction
changes
a
v
R
The acceleration in this case is
called centripetal acceleration, pointed toward
the center!
8Uniform Circular Motion Period
The time it takes to travel one cycle is the
period .
- Distance circumference 2pr
- Velocity distance / time
- Period time for one circle
9Centripetal acceleration
- centripetal acceleration
- V is the tangential velocity(constant number
with changing direction) - F ma is now F mv2/r
-
10Wide turns and tight turns
little R
big R
for the same speed, the tighter turn requires
more acceleration
11Example
- What is the tension in a string used to twirl a
0.3 kg ball at a speed of 2 m/s in a circle of 1
meter radius? - Force mass x acceleration m ? aC
- acceleration aC v2 / R (2 m/s)2/ 1 m
- 4 m/s2
- force m aC 0.3 ? 4 1.2 N
- If the string is not strong enough to handle this
tension it will break and the ball goes off in a
straight line.
12Applying Newtons 2nd Law
Always points toward center of circle. (Always
changing direction!)
Centripetal force is the magnitude of the force
required to maintain uniform circular motion.
13Examples of centripetal force
- Tension- ball on a string
- Gravity- planet motion
- Friction- cars
- Normal Force- coasters banked cars
Centripetal force is NOT a new force. It is
simply a way of quantifying the magnitude of the
force required to maintain a certain speed around
a circular path of a certain radius.
14Whats this Centrifugal force ? ?
- The red object will make the turn only if there
is enough friction on it - otherwise it goes straight
- the apparent outward force is called the
centrifugal force - it is NOT A REAL force!
- an object will not move in a circle until
something makes it!
object on the dashboard
straight line object naturally follows
15Work Done by the Centripetal Force
- Since the centripetal force on an object is
always perpendicular to the objects velocity,
the centripetal force never does work on the
object - no energy is transformed. - W Fd cos(90)0
Fcent
v
16Direction of Centripetal Force, Acceleration and
Velocity
17Tension Can Yield a Centripetal Acceleration
If the person doubles the speed of the airplane,
what happens to the tension in the cable? F
Tension mv2/r
Doubling the speed, quadruples the force (i.e.
tension) to keep the plane in uniform circular
motion.
18Friction Can Yield a Centripetal Acceleration
F friction umg mv2/r
19Gravity Can Yield a Centripetal Acceleration
Hubble Space Telescope orbits at an altitude of
598 km (height above Earths surface). What is
its orbital speed?
F mMG/r2 mv2/r
20Banked Curves
Why exit ramps in highways are banked?
21Artifical Gravity
F Normal force mv2/r If v2/r 9.8, seems
like earth!
22horizontal Circular Motion(normal force always
same)
F Normal force mv2/r (doesnt matter
where) Like center of a vertical circle
23Vertical Circular Motion(normal force varies)
Top mg normal mv2/r (normal
smallest, v same) side normal mv2/r
(weight not centripetal, v same) bottom
normal - mg mv2/r (normal largest, v
same)
24Relationship Between Variables of Uniform
Circular Motion
- Suppose two identical objects go around in
horizontal circles of identical diameter but one
object goes around the circle twice as fast as
the other. The force required to keep the faster
object on the circular path is - the same as
- one fourth of
- half of
- twice
- four times
- the force required to keep the slower object on
the path.
The answer is E. As the velocity increases the
centripetal force required to maintain the circle
increases as the square of the speed.
25Relationship Between Variables of Uniform
Circular Motion
- Suppose two identical objects go around in
horizontal circles with the same speed. The
diameter of one circle is half of the diameter of
the other. The force required to keep the object
on the smaller circular path is - the same as
- one fourth of
- half of
- twice
- four times
- the force required to keep the object on the
larger path.
The answer is D. The centripetal force needed to
maintain the circular motion of an object is
inversely proportional to the radius of the
circle. Everybody knows that it is harder to
navigate a sharp turn than a wide turn.
26Relationship Between Variables of Uniform
Circular Motion
- Suppose two identical objects go around in
horizontal circles of identical diameter and
speed but one object has twice the mass of the
other. The force required to keep the more
massive object on the circular path is - the same as
- one fourth of
- half of
- twice
- four times
Answer D.The mass is directly proportional to
centripetal force.
27The Apple the Moon
- Isaac Newton realized that the motion of a
falling apple and the motion of the Moon were
both actually the same motion, caused by the same
force - the gravitational force.
28Universal Gravitation
- Newtons idea was that gravity was a universal
force acting between any two objects.
29At the Earths Surface
- Newton knew that the gravitational force on the
apple equals the apples weight, mg, where g
9.8 m/s2.
W mg
30Weight of the Moon
- Newton reasoned that the centripetal force on the
moon was also supplied by the Earths
gravitational force.
?
Fc mg
31Law of Universal Gravitation
- In symbols, Newtons Law of Universal Gravitation
is - Fgrav ma G
- Where G is a constant of proportionality.
- G 6.67 x 10-11 N m2/kg2
Mm
r 2
32An Inverse-Square Force
33Gravitational Field Strength(acceleration)
- Near the surface of the Earth, g F/m 9.8
N/kg 9.8 m/s2. - In general, g GM/r2, where M is the mass of the
object creating the field, r is the distance from
the objects center, and G 6.67 x10-11 Nm2/kg2.
34Gravitational Force
- If g is the strength of the gravitational field
at some point, then the gravitational force on an
object of mass m at that point is Fgrav mg. - If g is the gravitational field strength at some
point (in N/kg), then the free fall acceleration
at that point is also g (in m/s2).
35Gravitational Field Inside a Planet
- The blue-shaded partof the planet pulls
youtoward point C. - The grey-shaded partof the planet does not pull
you at all.
36Black Holes
- When a very massive star gets old and runs out of
fusionable material, gravitational forces may
cause it to collapse to a mathematical point - a
singularity. All normal matter is crushed out of
existence. This is a black hole.
37Earths Tides
- 2 high tides and 2 low tides per day.
- The tides follow the Moon.
- Differences due to sun not signficant
38Why Two Tides?
- Tides due to stretching of a planet.
- Stretching due to difference in forces on the
two sides of an object. - Since gravitational force depends on distance,
there is more gravitational force on the side of
Earth closest to the Moon and less gravitational
force on the side of Earth farther from the Moon.
Not much difference from the Sun since its much
further awayI
39Why Two Tides?