Kinetic and potential energy in circular and rotational motion

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the analysis of a bead moving on a circular hoop that is rotating about a vertical axis. The problem involves deriving the Lagrangian for the system, which includes both kinetic and potential energy components, and exploring the conservation of energy within this context.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the components of kinetic energy related to the bead's motion and the gravitational potential energy. There are differing interpretations of the potential energy and its sign, as well as the computation of the conserved quantity E.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with each other's reasoning, questioning assumptions about the forms of kinetic and potential energy. Some suggest that the original poster's interpretation of the energy terms may be incorrect, while others offer alternative formulations. There is no explicit consensus, but multiple perspectives are being explored.

Contextual Notes

There are references to previous assignments and textbook solutions that may influence participants' understanding of the problem. The discussion also highlights potential discrepancies in the expected forms of energy due to the non-inertial frame of reference.

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Homework Statement



Consider a bead of mass m that is confined to move on a circular hoop of radius r. The axis of symmetry of the hoop is horizontal, and the hoop is rotating about a vertical axis at a uniform rate \omega. Neglect friction and assume a constant gravitational acceleration of magnitude g. Let the angle \phi specify the position of the bead on the hoop, with \phi = 0 corresponding to the bead lying at the bottom of the hoop.

Derive the following Lagrangian:

L = T-V = \frac{1]{2}mr^2(\dot{\phi}^2 + \omega^2\sin^2\phi) + mgr\cos\phi

Since the Lagrangian doesn't depend explicitly on time, there is a conserved quantity for this system, E = \dot{\phi}\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{\phi}}. Compute E and show that it is constant. Is the constant the total energy of the system T+V?

Homework Equations



Most relevant equations are there

The Attempt at a Solution



I thought I computed the Lagrangian just fine. My logic was that there were two sources of kinetic energy: that of the bead moving in circular motion (mr^2\dot{\phi}^2/2) and that of the bead rotating. My thinking was that as the bead rotated, if it was at an angle \phi, then it was tracing a circle of radius \r\sin\phi, so its kinetic energy would be mr^2\omega^2\sin^2\phi/2.

I think the potential energy is purely gravitational. If h=0 corresponds to the height of the center of the hoop, then the potential energy is -mgr\cos\phi. This gives the correct Lagrangian.

However, it does not give the correct energy. When I compute E, it comes out to be 1/2 mr^2(\dot{\phi}^2 - \omega^2\sin^2\phi - mgr\sin\phi. That middle term has the wrong sign, but I can't figure out why. Moreover, this version of E is not conserved. The only conclusion I can reach is that somehow, what I took as rotational kinetic energy is actually potential energy, but that doesn't make sense. Any thoughts? Thank you!
 
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I don't understand how your Rωsinθ is negative since Rsinθ is just the radial length from the axis of rotation to a point on the hoop

Potential NRG should be mgR(1-cosθ) because it is at a max when cosθ = 0 and that is perependicular to the axis of rotation and this is when your tangential velocity is a max

The lagrangian should be

.5mR2((dθ/dt)2 + ω2sin2θ) -mgR(1-cosθ)

and i know this is correct since i did this problem for an assignment a month ago
 
My R\sin\omega is positive. If you mean in the E computation, it's because in computing E, you subtract the Lagrangian, hence the negative sign.

As for the potential energy, I like yours much better than what I have; however, the first part of the assignment required matching the form shown in the OP, which didn't come through for some reason:

L = T-V = \frac{1]{2}mr^2(\dot{\phi}^2 + \omega^2\sin^2\phi) + mgr\cos\phi
 
I'm also beginning to wonder if you would even expect that quantity E to be the total energy of the system, since I think there's also an effective potential in there somewhere
 
Its the pot that changes sign not E. what u were given is wrong. My prof gave us the textbook solution for the non inertial frame. And this question is an example in taylor.

Edit talking the derivative of anything will give u force not energy
 

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