Title: Ch 7 - Circular Motion
1Ch 7 - Circular Motion
- Circular motion Objects moving in a circular
path.
2Measuring Rotational Motion
- Rotational Motion when an object turns about an
internal axis. - Ex. Earths is every 24 hrs.
- Axis of rotation the line about which the
rotation occurs - Arc length the distance (s) measured along the
circumference of the circle
3- Radian- an angle whose arc length is equal to its
radius, which is approximately equal to 57.3 - When the arc length s is equal to the length of
the radius, r, the angle ? swept by r is equal
to one rad. - Any angle ? is radians if defined by
- ? s/r
4- When a point moves 360,
- ?s/r 2pr/r 2p rad
- Therefore, to convert from rads to degrees
- ?(rad) p ?(deg)
- 180
- For angular displacement,
- ???s/r
- Angular displacement (in radians) change in arc
length/distance from axis
5Example Problem
- While riding on a carousel that is rotating
clockwise, a child travels through an arc length
of 11.5 m. If the childs angular displacement
is 165, what is the radius of the carousel? - Ans. 3.98 m
6Angular Substitutes for Linear Quantities
- Linear (Straight Line)
- Displacement x
- Velocity v
- Acceleration a
- Rotational
- Displacement ?
- Velocity ?
- Acceleration a
7- Angular speed the rate at which a body rotates
about an axis, expressed in radians per second - Symbol ? (omega) Unit rad/s
- ?(avg) ??/?t
- ? can also be in rev/s
- To convert
- 1 rev 2p rad
8Example Problem
- A child at an ice cream parlor spins on a stool.
The child turns counter-clockwise with an average
angular speed of 4.0 rad/s. In what time
interval will the childs feet have an angular
displacement of 8.0 rad - Ans. 6.3 s
9- Angular Acceleration the time rate of change of
angular speed, expressed in radians per second
per second - avg ?2-?1/t2-t1 ??/?t
- Average angular acceleration change in angular
speed / time interval
10Example Problem
- A cars tire rotates at an initial angular speed
of 21.5 rad/s. The driver accelerates, and after
3.5 s the tires angular speed is 28.0 rad/s.
What is the tires average angular acceleration
during the 3.5 s time interval? - Ans. 1.9 rad/s2
11Frequency vs. Period
- Frequency of revolutions per unit of time.
Unit revolutions/second (rev/s). - Period time for one revolution. Unit second
(s). - Inversely related
-
- t 1/f and f 1/t
12Tangential Velocity
- Speed that moves along a circular path.
- Right angles to the radii.
- Direction of motion is always tangent to the
circle.
13Rotational Speed
- The number of rotations per unit of time.
- All parts of the object rotate about their axis
in the same amount of time. - Units RPM (revolutions per minute).
14Tangential vs. Rotational
- If an object is rotating
- All points on the object have the same
rotational (angular) velocity. - All points on the object do not have the same
linear (tangential) velocity. - Tangential speed is greater on the outer edge
than closer to the axis. A point on the outer
edge moves a greater distance than a point at the
center. - Tangential speed radial distance x rotational
speed
15Centripetal Acceleration
- The acceleration of an object moving in a circle
points toward the center of the circle. - Means center seeking or toward the center.
167.3 Forces that maintain circular motion
17- Consider a ball swinging on a string. Inertia
tends to make the ball stay in a straight-line
path, but the string counteracts this by exerting
a force on the ball that makes the ball follow a
circular path. - This force is directed along the length of the
string toward the center of the circle.
18The force that maintains circular motion
(formerly known as centripetal force)
- Fc (mvt2)/r
- Force that maintains circular motion mass x
(tangential speed)2 distance to axis of motion - Fc mr?2
- Force that maintains circular motion mass x
distance to axis x (angular speed)2 - Because this is a Force, the SI unit is the
Newton (N)
19Practice Problem
- A pilot is flying a small plane at 30.0 m/s in a
circular path with a radius of 100.0 m. If a
force of 635N is needed to maintain the pilots
circular motion, what is the pilots mass? - Answer m 70.6 kg
20Common Misconceptions
- Inertia is often misinterpreted as a force
- Think of this example How does a washing
machine remove excess water from clothes during
the spin cycle?
21Newtons Law of Universal Gravitation
- Gravitational force a field force that always
exists between two masses, regardless of the
medium that separates them the mutual force of
attraction between particles of matter - Gravitational force depends on the distance
between two masses
22Newtons Law of Universal Gravitation
Where F Force M1 and m2 are the masses of the
two objects R is the distance between the
objects And G 6.673 x 10-11 Nm2/kg2 (constant
of universal gravitation)
23Practice Problem
- Find the distance between a 0.300 kg billiard
ball and a 0.400 kg billiard ball if the
magnitude of the gravitational force is 8.92 x
10-11 N. - Answer r 3.00 x 10-1 m