1 / 14

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 free body diagrams! Ex of forces: tension, banked curves, gravitation. Period and Speed.

nellis
Télécharger la présentation

Uniform Circular Motion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Uniform Circular Motion

  2. What is uniform circular motion? • Constant speed • Circular path • Must be an unbalanced force acting towards axis of rotation- think free body diagrams! • Ex of forces: tension, banked curves, gravitation

  3. Period and Speed • Often easier to use period T= time to complete 1 revolution instead of linear speed • Circle=2r • So if v=d/t then V= 2r/T REMEMBER: speed may be constant but velocity is not! Acceleration changes the direction.

  4. Vectors in circular motion • Velocity points tangent to circle • Acceleration points in to axis of rotation because a=v/ t and v is always towards center

  5. Centripetal Acceleration and Force • ac=v2/r and points in • Fc=macdue to Newton’s 2nd law • Sometimes written by replacing a so: Fc=mv2/r

  6. What provides Fc?

  7. DRAW Free body diagrams • Ex: An athlete who weights 800N is running around a curve at a speed of 5.0m/s in an arc whose radius is 5.0m. What provides the centripetal force? • Draw a free body diagram! FRICTION!

  8. Now solve… • What is the centripetal force? • What would happen if the radius of the curve were smaller? • Fc=mv2/r • Mass=Fw/g Fc=400N

  9. Now take it 2 step further… • If the coefficient of static friction btwn the shoe and the track =1 then will the runner slip? • How does changing the radius of the curve affect whether the runner will slip?

  10. Another example • A roller coaster enter as loop. At the very top the speed of the car is 25m/s and the acceleration points straight down. If the diameter of the loop is 50m and the total mass of the car=1200kg, what is the magnitude of the normal force? • Start with a free body diagram- what forces are acting? If net force is straight down, why doesn’t the car fall off the track?

  11. Banked Curves • Draw a free body diagram for a car traveling around a banked curve- even without friction Nsin is component of force keeping car on curve- even without any friction.

  12. Circular motion and universal gravitation • Satellites, planets, moons, etc can travel in circular paths- to solve, equate Fc to gravitational force

  13. Kepler’s Laws: 1 and 2 • Every planet moves in elliptical orbit with sun at 1 focus • As planet moves in its orbit, a line drawn from sun to planet sweeps out equal area in equal time

  14. Kepler’s 3rd Law • Remember Newton’s Universal Gravitation, G? • Kepler equated the force of G with the laws of circular motion to get: T2/R3 is a constant =42/GM Where T is period, M is mass of sun, R is radius of circular orbit (even though it’s not quite circular)

More Related