wow! i go away for fishmas, and there's a dozen posts when i get back!
anmolnanda said:
… i encountered a image:- http://img818.imageshack.us/img818/4782/anmol.png
it states that reaction force on the car is mg-mv^2/r so here it is considering centrifgual force so how is the concept applicable here
it is from a book by hc.verma
yes, you can caluclate this either in the inertial frame or in the car's frame
in the car's frame, there are
three forces: gravity and reaction force and centrifugal force … since in the car's frame the car has zero acceleration, we apply good ol' Newtons's second law (in the vertically upward direction) to get N - mg + mv
2/r = 0
but in the inertial frame, there are only
two forces: gravity and reaction force … since in the inertial frame the car has acceleration mv
2/r downward, we apply good ol' Newtons's second law (in the vertically upward direction) to get N - mg = - mv
2/r
that means the force exerted by car on road is not centrifugal,so it is only the action force on the ground and nothing else? …
"by car on road"? sorry, but considering the acceleration of the road is just bizarre!
if you mean "by road on car", the force N exerted by the road on the car is away from the centre (of curvature), so in that sense it could be described with the adjective "centrifugal" …
but that's not what we mean by "
the centrifugal force" …
the centrifugal force is a force (mv
2/r) which only exists in a rotating frame such as the frame of the car … N is a real force,
the same in either frame, and it isn't mv
2/r
