gunnar
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Is it correct to say that an object in circular motion has an outward acceleration. Does an electron stay in orbit around the nucleus because of an outward acceleration?
gunnar said:Is it correct to say that an object in circular motion has an outward acceleration.Does an electron stay in orbit around the nucleus because of an outward acceleration?
gunnar said:In physics your told that there is an inward acceleration but in chemistry there is an outward acceleration that is balanced by the attractive forces between the electron and the nucleus. What is what.
PS. Who is this man that was wrong?
gunnar said:My physics book tells me there is no such thing as a CENTRIFUGAL FORCE
gunnar said:the reason you feel a push backwards in an accelerated car is because you are in a different inertial frame than the car is in.
gunnar said:It makes more sense to say there is an outward acceleration which would explain why the electron stays in orbit around the nucleus. Is it not true that Newtons laws are not fully aplicable in microscopic physics
While I agree that its wrong to say it doesn't exist, its not quite what it seems to be and that's why it gets the characterization:dextercioby said:WRONG.The centrifugal force exists.