Circular Motion Chapter 9. Content Objective Centripetal Acceleration Uniform circular motion - dynamics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Circular Motion & Highway Curves
Advertisements

Lecture 16 Chapter 6: Circular Motion Please sit in the first six rows.
Chapter 5 Circular Motion.
Circular Motion; Gravitation
Objectives: The student will be able to:
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 Circular Motion 1.
5.2 Uniform Circular motion 5.3 Dynamic of Uniform Circular Motion
5.4 highway curves 5.5 Non-uniform circular motion 5.6 Drag Velocity
C H A P T E R 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Circular Motion Angular Acceleration. Distance around a Circle Circumference Distance around a circle r.
Using Newton’s Laws: Friction, Circular Motion, Drag Forces
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Circular Motion; Gravitation
Circular Motion and Gravitation Can you change your velocity and while not changing your speed? v F Consider the above situation. According to Newton.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Circular Motion and Other Applications of Newton’s Laws
Circular Motion & Gravitation
Chapter Opener. Caption: Newton’s laws are fundamental in physics
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Circular Motion; Gravitation
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Centripetal Force and Acceleration Unit 6, Presentation 1.
Uniform Circular Motion. Motion in a Circle Revolution: If entire object is moving in a circle around an external point. The earth revolves around the.
Circular Motion; Gravitation
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
7-3 Circular Motion. As an object travels in uniform circular motion Its tangential speed remains constant The direction of its velocity is constantly.
Uniform Circular Motion (UCM) The object travels in a circular path with a constant speed. Its velocity is tangent to the circle and is changing due to.
Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion. 5.1 Uniform Circular Motion DEFINITION OF UNIFORM CIRCULAR MOTION Uniform circular motion is the motion.
Circular Motion (Chapter 9).
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Using Newton’s Laws: Friction, Circular Motion, Drag Forces.
Circular Motion; Gravitation
Sect. 5-2: Uniform Circular Motion. The motion of a mass in a circle at a constant speed. Constant speed  The Magnitude (size) of the velocity vector.
C H A P T E R 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion.
Happy Thursday Grab your calculator Get ready to take notes Get ready for your warm up No quiz tomorrow Next test: after Thanksgiving break.
Uniform Circular Motion. What is uniform circular motion? Constant speed Circular path Must be an unbalanced force acting towards axis of rotation- think.
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion Uniform Circular Motion Centripetal Acceleration Centripetal Force Satellites in Circular Orbits Vertical Circular.
Circular Motion r v F c, a c. Centripetal acceleration – acceleration of an object in circular motion. It is directed toward the center of the circular.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation. 5-1 Kinematics of Uniform Circular Motion Uniform circular motion: motion in a circle of constant radius at constant.
Uniform circular motion and Universal Gravitation
C ENTRIPETAL A CCELERATION. This unit we will investigate the special case of kinematics and dynamics of objects in uniform circular motion – traveling.
5.5 Non-uniform circular motion 5.6 Drag Velocity
Uniform Circular Motion (UCM) The object travels in a circular path with a constant speed. Its velocity is tangent to the circle and is changing due to.
Circular Motion Lecture 08: l Uniform Circular Motion è Centripetal Acceleration è More Dynamics Problems l Circular Motion with Angular Acceleration è.
Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion. 5.1 Uniform Circular Motion DEFINITION OF UNIFORM CIRCULAR MOTION Uniform circular motion is the motion.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Circular Motion Practice. Key Equations F r = ma r a r = v 2 /r Note (s): When circular motion is constant, the net force is always toward the center!
Chapter 5 Circular Motion © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Ying Yi PhD Chapter 5 Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion 1 PHYS HCC.
Circular Motion and the Law of Universal Gravitation.
Circular Motion and Gravitation
Chapter 5: Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Physics: Principles with Applications, 6th edition
M Friction.
Physics: Principles with Applications, 6th edition
Aim: How do we explain centripetal motion?
Circular Motion r v Fc, ac.
Circular Motion and Gravitation
Circular Motion r v Fc, ac.
5-2 Uniform Circular Motion—Kinematics
AP notes part 2.
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation
Chapter 5 Circular Motion; Gravitation
Centripetal Force and Banked Curves Chapter 5 Lesson 2
Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion
Circular Motion and Other Applications of Newton’s Laws
Presentation transcript:

Circular Motion Chapter 9

Content Objective Centripetal Acceleration Uniform circular motion - dynamics

Uniform Circular Motion Uniform circular motion: motion in a circle of constant radius at constant speed Instantaneous velocity is always tangent to the circle. The magnitude of the velocity is constant: v 1 = v 2 =v

Centripetal Acceleration The acceleration, called the centripetal acceleration, points toward the center of the circle. The magnitude of centripetal acceleration is: A R =V 2 /R

Dynamics of Uniform Circular Motion For an object to be in uniform circular motion, Newton’s 2nd law requires a net force acting on it. This net force is called centripetal force: Physically, the centripetal force can be the tension in a string, the gravity on a satellite, the normal force of a ring, etc.

Centrifuge A centrifuge works by spinning very fast. A small object in the tube requires a large centripetal force. When the liquid can’t provide such a large force, the object will move (sink) to the end of the tube.

Example: Ultracentrifuge The rotor of an ultracentrifuge rotates at 50,000 rpm (revolutions per minute). A particle at the top of a test tube is 6.00 cm from the rotation axis. Calculate its centripetal acceleration, in “g’s.”

Highway Curves: Banked and Unbanked Car driving on a wall When a car goes around a curve, there must be a net force toward the center of the circle of which the curve is an arc. If the road is flat, that force is supplied by friction.

Highway Curves: Banked and Unbanked If the frictional force is insufficient, the car will tend to move more nearly in a straight line, as the skid marks show.

Highway Curves: Banked and Unbanked Banking the curve can help keep cars from skidding. When the curve is banked, the centripetal force can be supplied by the horizontal component of the normal force. In fact, for every banked curve, there is one speed at which the entire centripetal force is supplied by the horizontal component of the normal force, and no friction is required.

Activity Answer questions 8-12 on page 133 In your notebook – write question and answer.