Discover the Acceleration and Angle of Circular Motion | Car Physics Explained

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A user seeks help with a physics problem involving a car moving in a circular path with a constant linear acceleration of 0.5 m/s². They need to calculate the linear acceleration after 15 seconds and the angle between the total acceleration and the car's speed. The discussion clarifies that the formula for total acceleration involves both linear and centripetal components. The user successfully calculates the total acceleration and seeks confirmation on the method for finding the angle between the vectors. The problem is ultimately resolved with assistance from other forum members.
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physic for today please help me!

Homework Statement



A car starts moving from a stay position. The path of its movement has a circular form.
The radius of the circle that the car is moving on, is constantly 0.5 (m/s^2).
a) what is the pure linear acceleration of the car after 15 seconds?
b) what is the angle between the diagram of pure acceleration and diagram of speed of the car?

P.S: i was not sure about the word "pure linear accelerate", but i think the formula is :
pure linear accelerate = radical of [ (linear a)^2 + (radius a)^2 ]

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution

 
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welcome to pf!

hi googooloo! welcome to pf! :smile:

(try using the X2 icon just above the Reply box :wink:)

what language was this question written in? :confused:

i'll assume it meant …
A car starts moving from a stationary position. The path of its movement has a circular form.
The linear (or tangential) acceleration of the car, is constantly 0.5 (m/s2).
a) what is the linear acceleration of the car after 15 seconds?
b) what is the angle between the direction (or vector) of the total acceleration and the direction (or vector) of the speed of the car?​

your formula is for the total acceleration … the linear (or tangential) acceleration is perpendicular to the https://www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=27", so the total acceleration is √(al2 + ar2) …

but i think the question is only asking for the linear (tangential) acceleration :wink:

(we really need to see the original question to be sure)
 
Last edited by a moderator:


tiny-tim said:
hi googooloo! welcome to pf! :smile:

(try using the X2 icon just above the Reply box :wink:)

what language was this question written in? :confused:

i'll assume it meant …
A car starts moving from a stationary position. The path of its movement has a circular form.
The linear (or tangential) acceleration of the car, is constantly 0.5 (m/s2).
a) what is the linear acceleration of the car after 15 seconds?
b) what is the angle between the direction (or vector) of the total acceleration and the direction (or vector) of the speed of the car?​

your formula is for the total acceleration … the linear (or tangential) acceleration is perpendicular to the https://www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=27", so the total acceleration is √(al2 + ar2) …

but i think the question is only asking for the linear (tangential) acceleration :wink:

(we really need to see the original question to be sure)


Yes that is exactly what you said, and sorry for the language :biggrin:
anyways how can i find √(al2 + ar2)?
 
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tiny-tim said:
ar is the https://www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=27" , which you should know about

and al is simply dv/dt, the rate of change of the speed (the scalar speed, not the vector velocity)

well i need to find at and ar...
i have constant accelerate about 0.5 m/s2 and the time which it required from me about 15 sec.
SO> 0.5=delta V/ delta t=delta v/15
so delta v is 7.5...v0 is 0 m/s so V is 7.5...
r=30 m
ar=V2/r=1.875...
at is 0.5 m/s2...
so √(al2 + ar2) will be √(3.515+0.25)=1.94m/s2

now the 2nd part i know that V and at are in same direction so i need to find the angle between √(al2 + ar2) and al...
should i use 1.94*cos(teta)=at??
 
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googooloo said:
ar=V2/r=1.875...
at is 0.5 m/s2...
so √(al2 + ar2) will be √(3.515+0.25)=1.94m/s2
Yes, that's correct.
now the 2nd part i know that V and at are in same direction so i need to find the angle between √(al2 + ar2) and al...
should i use 1.94*cos(teta)=at??
Yes.
 


Redbelly98 said:
Yes, that's correct.

Yes.

Thanks a lot then it is solved :smile:
 
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