Centripetal Force
Centripetal Force
Centripetal Force
The circumference of any circle can be computed using from the radius according to the equation
Circumference = 2*pi*Radius
Combining these two equations above will lead to a new equation relating the speed of an object
moving in uniform circular motion to the radius of the circle and the time to make one cycle
around the circle (period).
where R represents the radius of the circle and T represents the period. This equation, like all
equations, can be used as an algebraic recipe for problem solving. It also can be used to guide
our thinking about the variables inthe equation relate to each other. For instance, the equation
suggests that for objects moving around circles of different radius in the same period, the object
traversing the circle of larger radius must be traveling with the greatest speed. In fact, the
average speed and the radius of the circle are directly proportional. A twofold increase in radius
corresponds to a twofold increase in speed; a threefold increase in radius corresponds to a
three--fold increase in speed; and so on. To illustrate, consider a strand of four LED lights
positioned at various locations along the strand. The strand is held at one end and spun rapidly
in a circle. Each LED light traverses a circle of different radius. Yet
since they are connected to the same wire, their period of rotation is
the same. Subsequently, the LEDs that are further from the center of
the circle are traveling faster in order to sweep out the circumference
of the larger circle in the same amount of time. If the room lights are
turned off, the LEDs created an arc that could be perceived to be
longer for those LEDs that were traveling faster - the LEDs with the
greatest radius. This is illustrated in the diagram at the right.
Acceleration
As mentioned earlier in Lesson 1, an object moving in uniform circular motion is moving
in a circle with a uniform or constant speed. The velocity vector is constant in magnitude
but changing in direction. Because the speed is constant for such a motion, many
students have the misconception that there is no acceleration. "After all," they might
say, "if I were driving a car in a circle at a constant speed of 20 mi/hr, then the speed is
neither decreasing nor increasing; therefore there must not be an acceleration." At the
center of this common student misconception is the wrong belief that acceleration has to
do with speed and not with velocity. But the fact is that an accelerating object is an
object that is changing its velocity. And since velocity is a vector that has both
magnitude and direction, a change in either the magnitude or the direction constitutes a
change in the velocity. For this reason, it can be safely concluded that an object moving
in a circle at constant speed is indeed accelerating. It is accelerating because the
direction of the velocity vector is changing.
where vi represents the initial velocity and vf represents the final velocity after some time of t.
The numerator of the equation is found by subtracting one vector (vi) from a second vector (vf).
But the addition and subtraction of vectors from each other is done in a manner much different
than the addition and subtraction of scalar quantities. Consider the case of an object moving in a
circle about point C as shown in the diagram below. In a time of t seconds, the object has moved
from point A to point B. In this time, the velocity has changed from vi to vf. The process of
subtracting vi from vf is shown in the vector diagram; this process yields the change in velocity.
means center seeking. For object's moving in circular motion, there is a net force acting
towards the center which causes the object to seek the center.
To understand the importance of a centripetal force, it is important to have a sturdy
understanding of the Newton's first law of motion - the law of inertia. The law of inertia
states that ...
... objects in motion tend to stay in motion with the same speed and the same direction unless acted upon by an
unbalanced force.
According to Newton's first law of motion, it is the natural tendency of all moving objects
to continue in motion in the same direction that they are moving ... unless some form of
unbalanced force acts upon the object to deviate its motion from its straight-line path.
Moving objects will tend to naturally travel in straight lines; an unbalanced force is only
required to cause it to turn. Thus, the presence of an unbalanced force is required for
objects to move in circles.
In each case - the car starting from rest and the moving car braking to a stop - the
direction which the passengers lean is opposite the direction of the acceleration. This is
merely the result of the passenger's inertia - the tendency to resist acceleration. The
passenger's lean is not an acceleration in itself but rather the tendency to maintain the
state of motion while the car does the acceleration. The tendency of a passenger's body
to maintain its state of rest or motion while the surroundings (the car) accelerate is often
misconstrued as an acceleration. This becomes particularly problematic when we
consider the third possible inertia experience of a passenger in a moving automobile the left hand turn.
Suppose that on the next part of your travels the driver of the car makes a sharp turn to
the left at constant speed. During the turn, the car travels in a circular-type path. That is,
the car sweeps out one-quarter of a circle. The friction force acting upon the turned
wheels of the car causes an unbalanced force upon
the car and a subsequent acceleration. The
unbalanced force and the acceleration are both
directed towards the center of the circle about
which the car is turning. Your body however is in
motion and tends to stay in motion. It is the inertia
of your body - the tendency to resist acceleration that causes it to continue in its forward motion.
While the car is accelerating inward, you continue
in a straight line. If you are sitting on the passenger side of the car, then eventually the
outside door of the car will hit you as the car turns inward. This phenomenon might
cause you to think that you are being accelerated outwards away from the center of the
circle. In reality, you are continuing in your straight-line inertial path tangent to the circle
while the car is accelerating out from under you. The sensation of an outward force and
an outward acceleration is a false sensation. There is no physical object capable of
pushing you outwards. You are merely experiencing the tendency of your body to
continue in its path tangent to the circular path along which the car is turning. You are
once more left with the false feeling of being pushed in a direction that is opposite your
acceleration.
the circle. This is the centripetal force requirement. The word centripetal is merely an
adjective used to describe the direction of the force. We are not introducing a
new type of force but rather describing the direction of the net force acting upon the
object that moves in the circle. Whatever the object, if it moves in a circle, there is some
force acting upon it to cause it to deviate from its straight-line path, accelerate inwards
and move along a circular path. Three such examples of centripetal force are shown
below.
As a car makes a turn, the As a bucket of water is tied to As the moon orbits the Earth,
force of friction acting upon a
the force of gravity acting
the turned wheels of the
string and spun in a circle, the upon the moon provides the
car provides centripetal
tension force acting upon the centripetal force required for
force required for circular bucket provides the
circular motion.
motion.
centripetal force required for
circular motion.