What Factors Influence Centripetal Motion and Acceleration?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of centripetal motion and acceleration, exploring the factors that influence this type of motion. Participants are examining how acceleration is determined in circular motion, the role of frequency, mass, and tension in relation to centripetal forces, and the differences between uniform and non-uniform circular motion.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are attempting to clarify the relationship between speed, direction, and acceleration in circular motion. Questions are raised about how frequency affects tension and mass, as well as the implications of uniform versus non-uniform circular motion.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing insights into the characteristics of centripetal motion. Some guidance has been offered regarding the definitions and relationships involved, but there is no explicit consensus on the interpretations of frequency and its effects.

Contextual Notes

There are indications of confusion regarding the nature of acceleration in circular motion, particularly in distinguishing between uniform and non-uniform cases. Participants are also navigating assumptions about the relationships between various physical quantities involved in centripetal motion.

dekoi
Would anyone be kind enough to explain the concept of centripetal (circular) motion to me?

How accelerations are determined (i understand they are non constant);

What factors affect this motion, and/or what factors relate to it.

How do limits relate to this type of acceleration?


Thank you.
---

I understand the concept of this sort of acceleration. The speed remains constant throughout the cycles, however, the acceleration changes due tot he change in direction -- and thus a change in velocity.

Howevever, i am not sure how frequency of the cycles affects e.g. tension (of a string, if a string is spinning with an attached rubber stopper for example), how mass affects frequency, and other relationships with frequency.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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Sounds like a direct homework question from the text :rolleyes:

Try giving it a try and I'm sure you can find all the answers on google
 
It is not a direct homework question. Although I'm glad you feel my sentence structure seems like it :)

I understand the concept of this sort of acceleration. The speed remains constant throughout the cycles, however, the acceleration changes due tot he change in direction -- and thus a change in velocity.

Howevever, i am not sure how frequency of the cycles affects e.g. tension (of a string, if a string is spinning with an attached rubber stopper for example), how mass affects frequency, and other relationships with frequency.
 
Circular motion is characterized by an orbital radius r, a speed v, the mass m of the object which moves in a circle, and the magnitude F of the centripetal force. The force of the Centripetal motion equals (m*v^2)/r

velocity=2*pi*R/T
acceleration=v^2/R
angular frequency= 2pi/T

T is the period
 
Last edited:
UrbanXrisis said:
Circular motion is characterized by an orbital radius r, a speed v, the mass m of the object which moves in a circle, and the magnitude F of the centripetal force. The force of the Centripetal motion equals (m*v^2)/r

velocity=2*pi*R/T
acceleration=v^2/R
angular frequency= 2pi/T

T is the period
That's assuming uniform circular motion where the only acceleration is towards the center of the circle.

In non-uniform circular motion (where the speed of the object is accelerating) there is also a tangental component of acceleration that is tangent to the circle of motion. You can then take the vector product of the tangential and centripetal acceleration to get the net acceleration.
 
dekoi said:
<snip>
I understand the concept of this sort of acceleration. The speed remains constant throughout the cycles, however, the acceleration changes due tot he change in direction -- and thus a change in velocity.
</snip>

Not quite. For your more simple cases, the speed is constant, but the direction is changing, and as a result the velocity is changing, so the object is accelerating.

The acceleration is NOT changing!

For more complex cases (as previously stated by dav2008) you can have a non-uniform acceleration, but I thought this needed clarifying first.
 

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