Car curves at a radius of 50m while travelling at 100km/hr

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The discussion focuses on calculating centripetal acceleration for various scenarios, starting with a car traveling at 100 km/h on a 50m radius curve. The correct formula for centripetal acceleration is emphasized as ar = v²/r, and results should be expressed as multiples of g (9.8 m/s²). Participants clarify that the coefficient of friction is not needed for these calculations and stress the importance of converting velocity to meters per second. There is also guidance on finding angular velocity for problems involving rotational motion. The conversation highlights the need for careful unit conversion and recalculating values to ensure accuracy.
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Homework Statement



Calculate the centripetal acceleration module in the following cases as a multiple of g = 9.8 m / s ^ 2.
a) a car traveling at 100km / h on a curve of radius 50m.
b) a jet plane flying at 1,500 km / h and making a turning radius of 5km.
c) a stone that is rotated every 0.5 s after a string of length 1 m
d) a speck of dust on the edge of a disk of 30 cm diameter rotating at 33.33333 ... rev / min.
e) a molecule in a centrifugal radius of 15cm rotating at 30,000 rev / min.


Homework Equations


a)

g= 9.8 m/s2
ar = v2/r
ar = ug

u: coefficient of friction(WHERE DO I GET THIS?!)

haven't touched b) and on yet..

The Attempt at a Solution


so here's how i began...
converted:
vi = 100km/h = 10 000m/3600s = 27,78m/s
ar= 1002/50 = 200 m/s2

ar = 9,8u

Okay... so how do i get the coefficient of friction(u) if I am not given any mass value?
 
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You don't need the coefficient of Friction for these problems. Convert the velocity to m/s. Square it and divide by the radius in meters to get ac. Divide by 9.8 to get the multiple.

You will need to find the angular velocity for some of these problems and be able to convert from revolutions/min to radians/sec
 
RTW69 said:
You don't need the coefficient of Friction for these problems. Convert the velocity to m/s. Square it and divide by the radius in meters to get ac. Divide by 9.8 to get the multiple.

You will need to find the angular velocity for some of these problems and be able to convert from revolutions/min to radians/sec
That's awesome, thanks! I got a, b, and c, but I am stuck on d ... given its diameter, where do i go from there?
 
Last edited:
Remember that ac=r*ω2 you have r you need to find ω, the angular velocity. The units are radians/sec. The stone makes 1 revolution in .5 seconds. 1 revolution is how many radians? Divide that number by 0.5 sec
 
RTW69 said:
Remember that ac=r*ω2 you have r you need to find ω, the angular velocity. The units are radians/sec. The stone makes 1 revolution in .5 seconds. 1 revolution is how many radians? Divide that number by 0.5 sec

I got it, thanks!
 
RTW69 said:
You don't need the coefficient of Friction for these problems. Convert the velocity to m/s. Square it and divide by the radius in meters to get ac. Divide by 9.8 to get the multiple.

You will need to find the angular velocity for some of these problems and be able to convert from revolutions/min to radians/sec

I'm doing the d right now...
found that r= 0,015m
w = 0,349 rad/s
and used the equation:
ac=r*ω2
and got ac= 0,0018

then divided it by 9,8... and got 1,84 x10^-4g... when the right answer should just be 1,87g
HELP?
 
Last edited:
radius is not .015m
ω is not .349 rad/s
Recheck these values and recalculate
 
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