gangsta316
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Is this derivation correct?
I managed to derive v = r \omega and (I think) a = \omega^2 r.
I did a^2 = \ddot{x}^2 + \ddot{y}^2 to get eventually
a^2 = r^2(\dot{\theta}^4 + \ddot{\theta}^2). Then I said that, for uniform circular motion, the angular velocity \dot{\theta} is a constant \omega meaning that \ddot{\theta} is equal to zero. So then it came to a = \omega^2 r.
But how do we know, from my derivation, that this is a centripetal acceleration toward the center? Is it because the tangential acceleration is the one I discarded and so this is the perpendicular component of acceleration? Is the formula valid where the angular velocity is not constant?
I managed to derive v = r \omega and (I think) a = \omega^2 r.
I did a^2 = \ddot{x}^2 + \ddot{y}^2 to get eventually
a^2 = r^2(\dot{\theta}^4 + \ddot{\theta}^2). Then I said that, for uniform circular motion, the angular velocity \dot{\theta} is a constant \omega meaning that \ddot{\theta} is equal to zero. So then it came to a = \omega^2 r.
But how do we know, from my derivation, that this is a centripetal acceleration toward the center? Is it because the tangential acceleration is the one I discarded and so this is the perpendicular component of acceleration? Is the formula valid where the angular velocity is not constant?