Analyzing Nonuniform Circular Motion in an Unbalanced Wheel

In summary, an unbalanced wheel with an instantaneous acceleration that depends on the angle of rotation can be analyzed using the pendulum problem and quadrature.
  • #1
Jonathan
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0
How does one analyse nonuniform circular motion of an unbalanced wheel where the instantaneous acceleration of the anomalous point mass (the one that makes it unbalanced) depends on the position in rotation? In this case, the acceleration depends on the cosine of the angle relative to right-hand side of a horizontal line (0 = 3 o'clock, π/2 = 12 o'clock, etc. as usual).
 
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  • #2
I wanted to think about this for a while but as soon as I started actually working on it I noticed something: Since the weight is concentrated at a single point, we can ignore the disk and think of the weight as attached to the center of the wheel by a rod: this is the classic "pendulum problem"!

Drawing a force diagram and, of course, using "F= ma", we get
m r d2θ/dt2= -mg sinθ where θ is 0 when the weight is directly below the center of the wheel and r is the distance from the center of the wheel to the weght.

This is a (very) non-linear equation so there is no general method of solution. If θ is small, we can approximate sinθ by θ and get r d2θ/dt2 = - g θ or d2θ/dt2+ g/rθ= 0.


That's a linear homogeneous equation with constant coefficients and its general solution is θ(t)= C1 cos([squ](g/r)θ)+ C2 sin([squ](g/r)θ). In particular, if we hold the wheel so that the weight makes initial angle Θ with the vertical and release it, θ(t)= Θcos([squ](g/r)θ). The weight moves through the vertical and to an equal height on the other side then repeats periodically.

More generally, we can use "quadrature". If we let ω= dθ/dt, we have d2θ/dt2= dω/dt and then, using the chain rule, dθ/dt dω/dθ= ω dω/dθ.

The equation becomes ωdω/dθ= -g/r sinθ so ωdω= (-g/r) sinθdθ and
(1/2)ω2= (g/r)cosθ+ C.

Theoretically, one could solve for ω= dθ/dt and then integrate that but it gives an "elliptic integral" which cannot be done in closed form. What we can do is draw the "phase plane diagram". For a number of different values of C, graph ω against θ. For some values of C you get "circular" graphs (periodic solutions- the wheel swings back and forth). For other values it's not: the wheel just keeps going around in the same direction.


edit: fixed θs and ωs
 
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  • #3
Finally a post!

Well, just as I thought, no (simple) solution. I hate it when that happens, and it always does because I don't work with simple problems. Thanks!
 
  • #4
It's an undriven, damped harmonic oscillator, as said- there is an excellent solution. You're trying to solve this differential equation:

m d2x/dt2 + b dx/dt + kx =0

(the right-hand side would be a force function if the oscillator were driven)
solve it for x and you can find the instantaneous position of any particle on the rim of the wheel from time just after initial acceleration.
 

1. What is nonuniform circular motion?

Nonuniform circular motion is the motion of an object moving in a circular path at varying speeds. This means that the object is accelerating, either speeding up or slowing down, as it moves around the circle.

2. What causes an object to experience nonuniform circular motion?

An object experiences nonuniform circular motion when there is an unbalanced force acting on it. This can be caused by changes in velocity, friction, or other external forces.

3. How is nonuniform circular motion different from uniform circular motion?

Uniform circular motion is when an object moves in a circular path at a constant speed. In nonuniform circular motion, the speed is constantly changing, resulting in acceleration.

4. How is nonuniform circular motion related to centripetal and tangential acceleration?

In nonuniform circular motion, the acceleration can be broken down into two components: centripetal acceleration, which is directed towards the center of the circle, and tangential acceleration, which is directed tangent to the circle. These two components work together to change the direction and speed of the object.

5. What are some real-life examples of nonuniform circular motion?

Some examples of nonuniform circular motion include a car going around a curved road, a roller coaster going around a loop, and a spinning top slowing down as it loses energy. The motion of planets and satellites in orbit around a central body is also an example of nonuniform circular motion.

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