hardyivan007 said:
Another question, if there is a horizontal circular disk with attached small blades at the sides, it is said that if the rotation is more then 500 rad per s then the blades will break and fly off. My teacher explained wit is that the force that holds the blades to the wheel may not be large enough to provide the centripetal force required. So the blades provide centripetal force?
In order for anything to move in a circle,
something must be exerting a centripetal force on it. Imagine you are holding a rock in your hand and then you spin around in a circle. Your hand is providing the centripetal force on the rock. If you spin fast enough, the amount of force needed to maintain the rock's circular motion will be greater than your hand can provide--that's when it flys out of your hand.
In the case of the blades attached to the disk, it is the disk that pulls the blades inward--the disk provides the centripetal force. The attachment between blade and disk is only so strong--at some point the blades break off if the disk spins too fast.
What actually provides centripetal force? Centripetal force is the force needed to maintain a circular motion with constant speed right? It is not the force that starts of the motion right? To start of a circular motion from rest, you need to have a force applied along the lines of the speed as well as the centripetal force?
Right. To get something going in a circle in the first place requires some force tangent to the circle.
And i know this is a bit of the main topic here but, How do cars actually move?
Coz my teacher said that the friction provides the reaction force to the force exerted by the car on the road. This reaction force is equal and opposite in direction and it is exerted on the car. This force allows the car to move.
In order for the car to accelerate,
something must provide an external force. That something is the road. Imagine being on a patch of frictionless ice--you can step on the gas all you want: No friction from the road means no acceleration of the car.
And like any other force, there's always an "action-reaction" pair involved. In order for the road to push on the car, the car must push on the road.
Then i thought about Fapplied - friction = ma, if friction moves the car, then what's the concept behind Fapplied - friction = Fresultant = ma? What did my teacher mean when he said, when friction is not enough, the car cannot move. So the friction actually is not the reaction force to the exerted force by the car?
What you really need is Newton's 2nd law. The
net force on an object = ma. In the case of the car on a horizontal stretch of road, the only horizontal force on it (ignoring air resistance) is the friction between tires and road. So: Friction force = ma. (Friction can act in the direction of motion, as when increasing speed; or opposite to the motion, as when applying the brakes.)
That "Fapplied - friction" stuff would apply like this: Say you were dragging some crate across the floor using some applied horizontal force Fa. If friction acts to resist the motion, then the
net force on the crate is Fa - friction, which must then equal "ma".
Make sense?