1 5.2 Uniform Circular Motion A force,, is directed toward the center of the circle This force is...

Post on 03-Jan-2016

213 views 0 download

Tags:

transcript

1

5.2 Uniform Circular Motion

A force, , is directed toward the center of the circle

This force is associated with an acceleration, ac

Applying Newton’s Second Law along the radial direction gives

Fig 5.8

2

Uniform Circular Motion, cont A force causing a

centripetal acceleration acts toward the center of the circle

It causes a change in the direction of the velocity vector

If the force vanishes, the object would move in a straight-line path tangent to the circle

Fig 5.9

3

Centripetal Force The force causing the centripetal

acceleration is sometimes called the centripetal force

This is not a new force, it is a new role for a force

It is a force acting in the role of a force that causes a circular motion

4

5

6

Conical Pendulum

The object is in equilibrium in the vertical direction and undergoes uniform circular motion in the horizontal direction

v is independent of m

Fig 5.11

7

Banked Curve These are designed

with friction equaling zero

There is a component of the normal force that supplies the centripetal force

Fig 5.11

8

9

10

11

12

13

Horizontal (Flat) Curve The force of static

friction supplies the centripetal force

The maximum speed at which the car can negotiate the curve is

Note, this does not depend on the mass of the car

14

15

16

17

18

19

Fig 5.13

20

21

22

23

24

Loop-the-Loop

This is an example of a vertical circle

At the bottom of the loop (b), the upward force experienced by the object is greater than its weight

Fig 5.14

25

26

27

28

Loop-the-Loop, Part 2

At the top of the circle (c), the force exerted on the object is less than its weight

Fig 5.14

29

30

Non-Uniform Circular Motion The acceleration and

force have tangential components

produces the centripetal acceleration

produces the tangential acceleration

Fig 5.15

31

32

Vertical Circle with Non-Uniform Speed

The gravitational force exerts a tangential force on the object Look at the

components of Fg

The tension at any point can be found

Fig 5.17

33

34

35

36

Top and Bottom of Circle The tension at the

bottom is a maximum

The tension at the top is a minimum

If Ttop = 0, then

Fig 5.17

37

5.4 Motion with Resistive Forces Motion can be through a medium

Either a liquid or a gas The medium exerts a resistive force, , on an

object moving through the medium The magnitude of depends on the medium The direction of is opposite the direction of

motion of the object relative to the medium nearly always increases with increasing

speed

38

Motion with Resistive Forces, cont The magnitude of can depend on the

speed in complex ways We will discuss only two

is proportional to v Good approximation for slow motions or small

objects is proportional to v2

Good approximation for large objects

39

R Proportional To v The resistive force can be expressed as

b depends on the property of the medium, and on the shape and dimensions of the object

The negative sign indicates is in the opposite direction to

40

R Proportional To v, Example

Analyzing the motion results in

Fig 5.18(a)

41

R Proportional To v, Example, cont Initially, v = 0 and dv/dt = g As t increases, R increases and a

decreases The acceleration approaches 0 when R

mg At this point, v approaches the terminal

speed of the object

42

Terminal Speed To find the terminal speed,

let a = 0

Solving the differential equation gives

is the time constant and = m/b

Fig 5.18(b)

43

For objects moving at high speeds through air, such as airplanes, sky divers and baseballs, the resistive force is approximately proportional to the square of the speed

R = 1/2 DAv2

D is a dimensionless empirical quantity that is called the drag coefficient

is the density of air A is the cross-sectional area of the object v is the speed of the object

R Proportional To v2

44

R Proportional To v2, example Analysis of an object

falling through air accounting for air resistance

Fig 5.19

45

R Proportional To v2, Terminal Speed The terminal speed

will occur when the acceleration goes to zero

Solving the equation gives

Fig 5.19

46

Some Terminal Speeds

47

Exercises of chapter 5

8, 13, 21, 26, 27, 29, 32, 39, 46, 55, 58

Exercise 32 Consider an object on which the net force is a

resistive force proportional to the square of its speed. For example, assume that the resistive force acting on a speed skater is , where k is a constant and m is the skater’s mass. The skater crosses the finish line of a straight-line race with speed v0 and then slows down by coasting on his skates. Show that the skater’s speed at any time t after crossing the finish line is

48

).1/()( 00 ktvvtv