How Is the Formula for Centripetal Force Derived?

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The formula for centripetal acceleration, a_c = v^2/r, originates from analyzing a particle in uniform circular motion, where the change in velocity forms a triangle that leads to the derivation of the formula. In circular motion, acceleration is not solely about the change in speed but also involves the change in direction, as velocity is a vector quantity. While the magnitude of velocity remains constant in uniform circular motion, the direction changes continuously, resulting in a constant radial (centripetal) acceleration directed towards the center of the circle. The discussion clarifies that centripetal acceleration is not merely the change in angle but rather the rate of change of velocity towards the center, distinguishing it from angular speed and angular acceleration. Understanding these components is crucial for grasping the dynamics of circular motion.
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When dealing with centripetal force, you run into the formula a_c=v^2/r. Where did that formula come from? I feel like knowing this will help me understand the concept better and not just the mechanics of it, but I can't figure it out. I think I'm just not in sync with mapping circular motion to linear motion.
 
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mastermind3001 said:
When dealing with centripetal force, you run into the formula a_c=v^2/r. Where did that formula come from? I feel like knowing this will help me understand the concept better and not just the mechanics of it, but I can't figure it out. I think I'm just not in sync with mapping circular motion to linear motion.
Have a look at this:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=482171#post482171

Also look here for the same derivation using polar co-ordinates:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centripetal_force

AM
 
The way it is usually taught is:

Consider a particle in uniform circular motion. Then as the particle moves from P1 to P2 on the circle in a time \Delta t the change in velocity \Delta v can be drawn on a diagram. (Draw \vec v_1, \vec v_2 and \Delta \vec v, they form a triangle.) Since the motion is circular \vec v_1 and \vec v_2 are perpendicular to \vec r_1 and \vec r_2 and the angle between them is the same as the angle between and \vec v_1, \vec v_2.

You thus get similar triangles:
\frac{|\Delta \vec v|}{v}=\frac{\Delta s}{R}
So that:

a=\lim_{\Delta t \to 0}\frac{|\Delta \vec v|}{\Delta t}=\frac{v}{R}\frac{ds}{dt}=\frac{v^2}{R}
 
I want to clarify something, because it's confusing the hell out of me. Velocity is a vector quantity, containing angle and magnitude. When working with anything linear, you usually work with the magnitude only (at least as far as I have done in my physics class). Here acceleration is the rate of change of the magnitude of the velocity. In circular motion, is the acceleration the change in the angle of the path of the object? Do you just not work with it's tangential velocity (magnitude) at all? It doesn't show up in a_c=\frac{v^2}{r}, which expanded is a_c=\frac{(\frac{2{\pi}r}{T})^2}{r}. And if all this is right, then isn't the acceleration always constant? Someone please clarify. I just don't understand what acceleration is when it comes to circular motion.
 
mastermind3001 said:
I want to clarify something, because it's confusing the hell out of me. Velocity is a vector quantity, containing angle and magnitude. When working with anything linear, you usually work with the magnitude only (at least as far as I have done in my physics class). Here acceleration is the rate of change of the magnitude of the velocity. In circular motion, is the acceleration the change in the angle of the path of the object? Do you just not work with it's tangential velocity (magnitude) at all? It doesn't show up in a_c=\frac{v^2}{r}, which expanded is a_c=\frac{(\frac{2{\pi}r}{T})^2}{r}. And if all this is right, then isn't the acceleration always constant? Someone please clarify. I just don't understand what acceleration is when it comes to circular motion.

For contant centripetal motion the magnitude of the acceleration is constant...it's direction, as it is directed radially, changes constantly. Acceleration for circular motion is just as any other acceleration the cange in velocity over time. Upon noting velocity is a vector you can see that its magnitude does not have to change to yield a nonzero aceleration.

The acceleration for centripetal motion can perhaps best be viewed componentswise. Look for a moment at only the x-component (say), ofcourse this changes over time yielding a nonzero x-component of the acceleration.
 
mastermind3001 said:
Do you just not work with it's tangential velocity (magnitude) at all? It doesn't show up in a_c=\frac{v^2}{r}, which expanded is a_c=\frac{(\frac{2{\pi}r}{T})^2}{r}. And if all this is right, then isn't the acceleration always constant? Someone please clarify. I just don't understand what acceleration is when it comes to circular motion.
For circular motion the acceleration can be viewed as having two components: tangential and radial (radial = centripetal). If the speed is constant, the tangential acceleration is zero. The radial component is just what you call the centripetal acceleration: it's the (rate of) change in the velocity towards the center. If all that changes is the direction of the velocity, then all you have is centripetal acceleration. (But note that centripetal acceleration does depend on the speed; it is not just a rate of change of angle, it's a rate of change of velocity.)
 
Is centripetal acceleration then just the change in the angle of the moving object per unit time?
 
mastermind3001 said:
Is centripetal acceleration then just the change in the angle of the moving object per unit time?
No. The change in the angle of the object per unit time is the angular speed, \omega; the change in \omega per unit time is the angular acceleration, \alpha.
 
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