Lecture 06- Circular Motion and Newtons Applications
Lecture 06- Circular Motion and Newtons Applications
laws applications
Circular Motion Terms
• The point or line that is the center of the circle is the axis of
rotation.
• If the axis of rotation is inside the object, the object is rotating
(spinning).
• If the axis of rotation is outside the object, the object is revolving.
Linear/Tangential Velocity
• Objects moving in a circle still have a linear velocity =
distance/time.
• This is often called tangential velocity, since the
direction of the linear velocity is tangent to the circle.
v
Circular motion
• When a particle moves in a circle, its motion is called circular
motion. For example
i. Motion of planets around the sun
ii. Motion of satellites around the earth,
iii. Motion of electrons around the nucleus, etc.
• when a body is moving along circular path with uniform
speed, it has acceleration due to continuously changing
direction,. In this type of motion velocity and acc are always
perpendicular to each other.
• An object moving along a circular path is not traveling in
a straight line. This means that you cannot use the
straight-line kinematics formulas developed in previous
lessons to describe the motion of such an object.
– You must use the equations for circular motion which we are
about to demonstrate/derive.
Uniform Circular Motion Analyzed
Consider an object moving with a
v2 constant speed in a circular path.
At time t1 the object has a velocity
v1. At time t2 the object has a
v1 velocity v2. These velocity vectors
have the same magnitude
since the speed is constant.
2r v 2
vc ac
T r
Circular Motion and N.S.L
2
v
Recall that according to FNET ma ac
Newton’s Second Law, the
r
2
acceleration is directly mv
FNET Fc
proportional to the Force. r
If this is true:
Fc Centripetal Force
Since the acceleration and the force are directly
related, the force must ALSO point towards the center.
This is called CENTRIPETAL FORCE.
v 2 (4.26) 2
ac 23.92 m / s 2
r 0.76
Examples
What is the minimum coefficient of static friction
Top view necessary to allow a penny to rotate along a 33 1/3 rpm
record (diameter= 0.300 m), when
the penny is placed at the outer edge of the record?
F f Fc rev 1 min
33.3 * 0.555 rev
min 60 sec sec
mv 2
FN FN 1sec
Ff r 1.80 sec T
0.555 rev rev
mv 2
mg 2r 2 (0.15)
mg r vc 0.524 m / s
T 1.80
v2
Side view v2 (0.524) 2
rg 0.187
rg (0.15)(9.8)
Examples
The maximum tension that a 0.50 m
string can tolerate is 14 N. A 0.25-kg T mg
ball attached to this string is being
whirled in a vertical circle. What is
the maximum speed the ball can
have (a) the top of the circle, (b)at
the bottom of the circle?
mv 2
FNET Fc mac
r
mv 2
T mg r (T mg ) mv 2
r
r (T mg ) 0.5(14 (0.25)(9.8))
v
m 0.25
v 5.74 m / s
Examples
At the bottom? mv 2
FNET Fc mac
r
mv 2
T mg r (T mg ) mv 2
r
r (T mg ) 0.5(14 (0.25)(9.8))
v
m 0.25
v 4.81 m / s
T
mg
Problem 1
A biker travels once around a circular
track of radius 20.0m in 3s.
Calculate:
a) the average tangential speed
b) the frequency
c) the period
Answers: 41.9m/s, f=0.33Hz, T=3s
Problem 2
A coin sits 0.10m from the center of a
record player spinning at 45rpm.
a) What is the frequency in Hertz?
b) What is the period?
c) What is the linear speed?
Answer: 0.75Hz, 1.33s, 0.47m/s