negation
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I'm at a loss. Can someone explain to me the entire idea of what it means for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
Vanadium 50 said:You're moving north but being pushed to the east.
negation said:I'm at a loss. Can someone explain to me the entire idea of what it means for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
negation said:I'm at a loss. Can someone explain to me the entire idea of what it means for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
negation said:Can someone explain to me the entire idea of what it means for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
negation said:Must it necessarily be for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
rcgldr said:A common example of acceleration perpendicular to velocity would be a car traveling at constant speed on a winding or circular road. The path could be just about any curved shape. The acceleration would always be perpendicular to velocity, and the driver would only use enough throttle to maintain speed (zero tangental acceleration) and use steering inputs (centripetal acceleration) to turn the car.
Pythagorean said:negation, would you provide us with some context? What scenario caused you to ask this question?
negation said:Do you think you could frame a geometric interpretation of this?
negation said:I'm at a loss. Can someone explain to me the entire idea of what it means for acceleration to be perpendicular to velocity?
He did: The path could be just about any curved shape.negation said:Do you think you could frame a geometric interpretation of this?
negation said:It's just scattered information in my textbook. There's no context so I'm a little lost.
However, I've read up a bit on centripetal forces so I might have a rough idea but it's not sufficiently rigorous for me.
But it would be possible to follow an elliptical path using only acceleration perpendicular to velocity; again, using the example of a car, a car traveling on an elliptical path at constant speed. As mentioned before, the path could be any curved shape, sine wave, parabola, hyperbola, spiral, ellipse, circle, ... .sophiecentaur said:For an elliptical orbit, the angle is only 90 degrees at apogee and perigee.
Not true. These are necessary but not sufficient conditions. If the acceleration vector switches sign on occasion you won't get circular motion. In addition to the above, the path has to be smooth (infinitely differentiable) to obtain uniform circular motion.D H said:To get uniform circular motion you need to add some constraints to the acceleration vector. Uniform circular motion results if the curve is planar (i.e., has zero torsion) and if the acceleration vector is constant in magnitude and is always orthogonal to the velocity vector.