| New Reply |
What exactly is centrifugal force |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Feb2-13, 03:53 PM | #120 |
|
|
What exactly is centrifugal force[itex]\Gamma^\mu_{\nu \lambda} = \dfrac{\partial x^\mu}{\partial x^i}\dfrac{\partial^2 x^i}{\partial x^\nu \partial x^\lambda}[/itex] where [itex]x^i[/itex] is any inertial, Cartesian coordinate system. I know that's cheating, because you'd like a characterization that doesn't involve special coordinate systems, but in practice, the noninertial coordinate systems people are interested in are related in a known way to some inertial Cartesian coordinate system. |
| Feb2-13, 03:59 PM | #121 |
|
Mentor
|
Here are the facts: The equations of motion have terms containing the connection coefficients In some valid coordinate systems those terms are non-zero Those terms have units of force and are called "fictitious forces" or "inertial forces" You cannot correctly represent the physics without those terms Here is my opinion: It is reasonable to call them "forces" and treat them as forces where appropriate I think that we agree on the facts. Given the facts, I have a hard time seeing my opinion as being in need of reconsideration. |
| Feb2-13, 04:05 PM | #122 |
Recognitions:
|
If you don't want to believe DaleSpam's example, try reading the users guides and theory manuals for a few standard commercial structural analysis programs like NASTRAN, ABAQUS, ANSYS, etc. Maybe they are all doing this the wrong way. Or maybe there is a difference between doing something practical, and writing some nice vector equations (whatever today's definition of "vector" happens to be). |
| Feb2-13, 04:24 PM | #123 |
|
Mentor
|
You don't need to use tensors to understand inertial forces. |
| Feb2-13, 05:10 PM | #124 |
|
|
|
| Feb2-13, 05:37 PM | #125 |
|
Mentor
|
That is like someone talking about the uses of water and someone else saying that all of those uses are equally well fulfilled by H2O. |
| Feb2-13, 05:51 PM | #126 |
|
|
A tensor is classified by a pair of numbers [itex](n,m)[/itex] called its type, or rank.
|
| Feb2-13, 05:54 PM | #127 |
|
|
|
| Feb2-13, 07:26 PM | #128 |
|
Mentor
|
In the equations of motion "fictitious forces" is just a name for the terms with connection coefficients. |
| Feb2-13, 07:29 PM | #129 |
|
|
[itex]- m \Gamma^i_{jk} U^j U^k [/itex] can unambiguously be called "the fictitious (or inertial) forces" |
| New Reply |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: What exactly is centrifugal force
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| G-Force and (possibly) Centrifugal force applied to the rotation of a car | Introductory Physics Homework | 0 | ||
| Centrifugal Force | Introductory Physics Homework | 4 | ||
| centrifugal force | General Physics | 14 | ||
| difference between pseudo force and centrifugal force | General Physics | 15 | ||
| Centrifugal force | Introductory Physics Homework | 0 | ||