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Oijl
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"Proper" description of uniform circular motion
Hey guys, the world's a great place because I just finished my archeology term paper. ...so now I have to focus on this physics.
I was just wondering if something's correct. Say I have a mass, like a puck, moving around on the end of a (massless) string in uniform circular motion on a frictionless surface, and this string goes through a hole in the surface (at the center of the circle of motion made by the puck) and is attached to a hanging mass. The hanging mass is motionless.
Trying to describe the position of the puck (looking down on it from above), I wrote
s(t) = rcos((v/r)t)i + rsin((v/r)t)j
(with radius r, speed v and time t)
The magnitude of this is r, the magnitude of its derivative is v, and the magnitude of its second derivative is (v^2)/r, which is centripetal acceleration.
My question is whether this would be "proper." I ask this because 1) using the derivative of this for the velocity equation would certainly properly describe the velocity at any time t, but it would do so in terms of the magnitude of the velocity, and that seems like cheating.
I'm sorry if this isn't the proper forum for this question (this question is for homework, though). What do you think? Is saying that the velocity of an object in uniform circular motion is just [[ the magnitude of the velocity times -sin((v/r)t) for one dimension and cos((v/r)t) for another ]] like saying one equals one times one?
Is, perhaps, v/r relateable to other values in this problem?
Thankz, thx, and thank you.
Homework Statement
Hey guys, the world's a great place because I just finished my archeology term paper. ...so now I have to focus on this physics.
I was just wondering if something's correct. Say I have a mass, like a puck, moving around on the end of a (massless) string in uniform circular motion on a frictionless surface, and this string goes through a hole in the surface (at the center of the circle of motion made by the puck) and is attached to a hanging mass. The hanging mass is motionless.
Trying to describe the position of the puck (looking down on it from above), I wrote
s(t) = rcos((v/r)t)i + rsin((v/r)t)j
(with radius r, speed v and time t)
The magnitude of this is r, the magnitude of its derivative is v, and the magnitude of its second derivative is (v^2)/r, which is centripetal acceleration.
My question is whether this would be "proper." I ask this because 1) using the derivative of this for the velocity equation would certainly properly describe the velocity at any time t, but it would do so in terms of the magnitude of the velocity, and that seems like cheating.
I'm sorry if this isn't the proper forum for this question (this question is for homework, though). What do you think? Is saying that the velocity of an object in uniform circular motion is just [[ the magnitude of the velocity times -sin((v/r)t) for one dimension and cos((v/r)t) for another ]] like saying one equals one times one?
Is, perhaps, v/r relateable to other values in this problem?
Thankz, thx, and thank you.