Examples of circular motion include: an artificial satellite orbiting the Earth in geosynchronous orbit, a stone which is tied to a rope and is being swung in circles (cf. hammer throw), a racecar turning through a curve in a race track, an electron moving perpendicular to a uniform magnetic field, and a gear turning inside a mechanism.
Circular motion is accelerated even if the angular rate of rotation is constant, because the object's velocity vector is constantly changing direction. Such change in direction of velocity involves acceleration of the moving object by a centripetal force, which pulls the moving object toward the center of the circular orbit. Without this acceleration, the object would move in a straight line, according to Newton's laws of motion.
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Formulas for uniform circular motion
For motion in a circle of radius r, the circumference of the circle is C = 2π r. If the period for one rotation is T, the angular rate of rotation, also known as angular velocity, ω is:The vector relationships are shown in Figure 1. The axis of rotation is shown as a vector Ω perpendicular to the plane of the orbit and with a magnitude ω = dθ / dt. The direction of Ω is chosen using the right-hand rule. With this convention for depicting rotation, the velocity is given by a vector cross product as
[edit] Constant speed
In the simplest case the speed, mass and radius are constant.Consider a body of one kilogram, moving in a circle of radius one metre, with an angular velocity of one radian per second.
- The speed is one metre per second.
- The inward acceleration is one metre per square second.
- It is subject to a centripetal force of one kilogram metre per square second, which is one newton.
- The momentum of the body is one kg·m·s−1.
- The moment of inertia is one kg·m2.
- The angular momentum is one kg·m2·s−1.
- The kinetic energy is 1/2 joule.
- The circumference of the orbit is 2π (~ 6.283) metres.
- The period of the motion is 2π seconds per turn.
- The frequency is (2π)−1 hertz.
- From the point of view of quantum mechanics, the system is in an excited state having quantum number ~ 9.48×1035.
- The speed is v = r·ω.
- The centripetal (inward) acceleration is a = r·ω 2 = r −1·v 2.
- The centripetal force is F = m·a = r·m·ω 2 = r−1·m·v 2.
- The momentum of the body is p = m·v = r·m·ω.
- The moment of inertia is I = r 2·m.
- The angular momentum is L = r·m·v = r 2·m·ω = I·ω.
- The kinetic energy is E = 2−1·m·v 2 = 2−1·r 2·m·ω 2 = (2·m)−1·p 2 = 2−1·I·ω 2 = (2·I)−1·L 2 .
- The circumference of the orbit is 2·π·r.
- The period of the motion is T = 2·π·ω −1.
- The frequency is f = T −1 . (Frequency is also often denoted by the Greek letter ν, which however is almost indistinguishable from the letter v used here for velocity).
- The quantum number is J = 2·π·L h−1
[edit] Description of circular motion using polar coordinates
During circular motion the body moves on a curve that can be described in polar coordinate system as a fixed distance R from the center of the orbit taken as origin, oriented at an angle θ (t) from some reference direction. See Figure 2. The displacement vector is the radial vector from the origin to the particle location:The velocity is the time derivative of the displacement:
The acceleration of the body can also be broken into radial and tangential components. The acceleration is the time derivative of the velocity:
No comments:
Post a Comment