Centrifugal Force and Angular Velocity

AI Thread Summary
Centrifugal force calculations require angular velocity to be expressed in radians per second (rad/s) for accurate unit conversion. While angular velocity can be initially considered in rotations per second, using rad/s allows for proper derivation of force in Newtons. The relationship between centripetal acceleration and angular velocity is established through the formula a = ω²r, leading to force calculations using F = ma. Radians are dimensionless, simplifying unit conversions and allowing for consistent results in physics equations. Understanding these concepts clarifies how angular velocity relates to force measurements.
lylos
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Homework Statement


I'm working on a problem in which I have to calculate the centrifugal force. I know the equation and everything, I'm just stuck on what units my angular velocity should have.

Homework Equations


\vec{F_{cen}}=-m\omega\times(\omega \times r')


The Attempt at a Solution


I've evaluated the above with angular velocity having units rotations*s^-1. I know that angular velocity should have units rad/s but I'm wondering how one gets units of Newtons when using rad/s as the unit of angular velocity. I've never really understood this, what is so special about radians that you can ignore them when converting units?
 
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I'm not sure if I can fully answer your question, but I can at least answer some.

Why can you drop the degrees when you do cos(degree)? I don't know the answer, all I know is you just can.

You can get N from angular velocity this way. F = ma. In this case, a is centripetal acceleration, which is = w^2 * r. Now you get m/s^2, multiply that by mass and you get Newtons.
 
lylos said:
I've never really understood this, what is so special about radians that you can ignore them when converting units?
You don't just ignore them; a radian is a dimensionless unit of measure . A radian is defined as the arc length of a circle subtended by the central angle between 2 radii of a circle, divided by the radius of the circle, that is, rad=s/r, where s is the arc length subtended by the cenrtral angle, and r is the radius of the circle. As you should see, the radian has units of length/length, which is dimensionless. That's how you end up with Newtons as the centripetal force unit, as Cashmoney has noted.
 
That makes better sense. Thank you!
 
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