Circular Motion Pearson 2007-2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8: Dynamics II: Motion in a Plane
Advertisements

Physics 111: Mechanics Lecture 5
Uniform Circular Motion
Circular Motion and Gravitation
Centripetal Acceleration and Centripetal Force
Circular Motion; Gravitation
Lecture 16: Rotational Motion. Questions of Yesterday 1) You are going through a vertical loop on roller coaster at a constant speed. At what point is.
As the ball revolves faster, the angle increases
Circular motion and Gravitation Chapter 6 1Physics Chapter 6.
CIRCULAR MOTION We will be looking at a special case of kinematics and dynamics of objects in uniform circular motion (constant speed) Cars on a circular.
Vertical Circular Motion A demo T8 T8.
Circular Motion Lecturer: Professor Stephen T. Thornton
5.4 highway curves 5.5 Non-uniform circular motion 5.6 Drag Velocity
Centripetal Acceleration 13 Examples with full solutions.
Circular Motion and Other Applications of Newton’s Laws
Using Newton’s Laws: Friction, Circular Motion, Drag Forces
Circular Motion.
Circular Motion and Other Applications of Newton’s Laws
Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity
Torque It is easier to open a door when a force is applied at the knob as opposed to a position closer to the hinges. The farther away the force, the more.
Demo spin stopper Is it accelerating? Does it have F net ? Direction of F net ? What causes F net ? Direction of F net ? Is tension doing work?
Chapter Opener. Caption: Newton’s laws are fundamental in physics
Circular and Centripetal Motion
Torque It is easier to open a door when a force is applied at the knob as opposed to a position closer to the hinges. The farther away the force, the more.
Centripetal Force and Acceleration
CIRCULAR MOTION AND OTHER APPLICATIONS OF NEWTON’S LAWS
CIRCULAR MOTION.
Forces of Friction When an object is in motion on a surface or through a viscous medium, there will be a resistance to the motion This is due to the interactions.
Centripetal Force and Acceleration Unit 6, Presentation 1.
Cutnell/Johnson Physics 7th edition Reading Quiz Questions
ROTATIONAL MOTION Uniform Circular Motion
RQ8: A car is driving at a constant speed in a perfect circle on a flat parking lot. The centripetal force acting on the car is: A. Gravity. B. The normal.
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Chapter 7 Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity
CHAPTER 6 : CIRCULAR MOTION AND OTHER APPLICATIONS OF NEWTON’S LAWS
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation. Centripetal Acceleration Centripetal means “Center Seeking” and the centripetal force on an object moving in a.
Uniform Circular Motion. Acceleration When an object moves at a constant speed in a circular path, it is constantly changing direction – accelerating.
Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion. 5.1 Uniform Circular Motion DEFINITION OF UNIFORM CIRCULAR MOTION Uniform circular motion is the motion.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Using Newton’s Laws: Friction, Circular Motion, Drag Forces.
Chapter Uniform Circular Motion  Uniform circular motion is the motion of an object traveling at a constant (uniform) speed on a circular path.
Circular Motion Part 2 By: Heather Britton. Circular Motion Part 2 According to Newton’s 2nd Law, an accelerating body must have a force acting on it.
C H A P T E R 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion.
Uniform Circular Motion. What is uniform circular motion? Constant speed Circular path Must be an unbalanced force acting towards axis of rotation- think.
Conceptual Physics Chapter 10
R. Field 2/5/2013 University of Florida PHY 2053Page 1 Circular Motion: Angular Variables The arc length s is related to the angle  (in radians = rad)
Circular Motion. The Radian Objects moving in circular (or nearly circular) paths are often measured in radians rather than degrees. In the diagram, the.
Centripetal Force A centripetal force accelerates a body by changing the direction of the body’s velocity without changing the body’s speed. Circular motions.
Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion. 5.1 Uniform Circular Motion DEFINITION OF UNIFORM CIRCULAR MOTION Uniform circular motion is the motion.
PHY 151: Lecture 6B 6.3 Extending Particle in Uniform Circular Motion Model (Continued)
Chapter 5 Circular Motion © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Ying Yi PhD Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion 1 PHYS HCC.
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
“What is uniform circular motion?” In uniform Circular motion a body travels at a constant speed on a circular path.
Centripetal Force Copyright Sautter 2003.
 Gravity is 9.8 or ~10 m/s 2  If dropped from rest: y = -½ gt 2.
Circular Motion and the Law of Universal Gravitation.
SACE Stage 2 Physics Circular Motion.
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Vertical Circular Motion
Physics 111: Mechanics Lecture 9
Circular Motion and Other Applications of Newton’s Laws
Recall: Uniform Circular Motion
More Centripetal Force Problems
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Vertical Circular Motion
Centripetal force is a force applied perpendicular to the motion of an object over a period of time, causing the object to move in a curve path. Depending.
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Aim: How do we explain centripetal motion?
Pendulum A string is attached to mass m and swung in a horizontal circle of radius r. There is tension T in the string. The angle θ is measured from the.
Presentation transcript:

Circular Motion Pearson 2007-2008

Uniform Circular Motion An object moving in a circle with constant speed, v, experiences a centripetal acceleration with: *a magnitude that is constant in time and is equal to *a direction that changes continuously in time and always points toward the center of the circular path For uniform circular motion, the velocity is tangential to the circle and perpendicular to the acceleration

Period and Frequency A circular motion is described in terms of the period T, which is the time for an object to complete one revolution. The distance traveled in one revolution is r The frequency, f, counts the number of revolutions per unit time.

Example of Uniform Circular Motion The moon’s nearly circular orbit about the earth has a radius of about 384,000 km and a period T of 27.3 days. Determine the acceleration of the Moon towards the Earth.

Moon…... *So we find that amoon / g = 0.000278 *Newton noticed that RE2 / R2 = 0.000273 *This inspired him to propose that Fgravity  1 / R2 (more on gravity in future lectures) amoon R RE g

Uniform Circular Motion *motion in a circle or circular arc at constant speed *the acceleration changes the direction of the velocity, not the magnitude *the “center-seeking” or centripetal acceleration is always orthogonal to the velocity and has magnitude: The period of the motion:

Uniform Circular Motion Newton’s 2nd Law: The net force on a body is equal to the product of the mass of the body and the acceleration of the body. *The centripetal acceleration is caused by a centripetal force that is directed towards the center of the circle.

Demo 1D-5 Does the contact force between the wine glass and red-water remain constant in uniform circular motion?

Consider the glass directly overhead. Choose the correct statement: The water doesn’t fall because the centripetal force on the water cancels the force of gravity. The water doesn’t fall because there isn’t enough time for it to fall. The water doesn’t fall because of the horizontal force applied to it by the glass, plus friction with the glass. The water is falling, but the glass is falling faster than it would under free fall.

mac = mv2/r = mg + Ny or ac = g  N/m N y mg x When N=0, the centripetal acceleration is just g. v mg N Top y x

v Top N mg y x Bottom v N mg

What speed is needed to lose contact between wine glass and red-water? Top v N mg What speed is needed to lose contact between wine glass and red-water?

(1) Top (3) Middle (2) Bottom 2) A person riding a Ferris Wheel moves through positions at (1) the top, (2) the bottom and (3) midheight. If the wheel rotates at a constant rate, rank (greatest first) these three positions according to... the magnitude of persons centripetal acceleration 2,1,3 1,2,3 3,2,1 all tie The magnitude of the Normal force? (1) Top (2) Bottom (3) Middle

(b) the magnitude of the net centripetal force on the person 1,2,3 3,1,2 3,2,1 all tie (c) the magnitude of the normal force on the person all tie 2,3,1 3,2,1 1,2,3

Demo 1D-2 Conical Pendulum q H T R *as q 90, v increases. *v is independent of mass. mg The period, T, is independent of mass and depends only on H.

A car of mass, m, is traveling at a constant speed, v, along a flat, circular road of radius, R. Find the minimum µs required that will prevent the car from slipping

A mass, m, on a frictionless table is attached to a hanging mass, M, by a cord through a hole in the table. Find the speed with which m must move in order for M to stay at rest.

A car of mass, m, is traveling at a constant speed, v, along a curve that is now banked and has a radius, R. What bank angle, q, makes reliance on friction unnecessary? N mg frictionless q

An airplane is flying in a horizontal circle with a speed of 480 km/hr An airplane is flying in a horizontal circle with a speed of 480 km/hr. If the wings of the plane are tilted 40o to the horizontal, what is the radius of the circle in which the plane is flying? (Assume that the required force is provided entirely by an “aerodynamic lift” that is perpendicular to the wing surface.) v=480 km/hr L L W