Is radial acceleration and centripetal acceleration the same thing?

AI Thread Summary
Radial acceleration and centripetal acceleration are synonymous in the context of uniform circular motion, both pointing towards the center. In uniform circular motion, the speed is constant, resulting in zero tangential acceleration. However, in non-uniform circular motion, tangential acceleration can occur alongside radial acceleration. The discussion also clarifies that any acceleration, including centripetal, requires a net force, specifically one with a tangential component for tangential acceleration to exist. Overall, understanding the relationship between these types of acceleration is crucial in mechanics.
Femme_physics
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In uniform circular motion,

Is radial acceleration and centripetal acceleration the same thing? Just a vector pointing towards the center? i.e. a synonym?
 
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Yes. Typically those terms are synonymous in that context.
 
Ah, great :) Thanks. Um, while I got your attention

Our lecturer gave us 2 formulas (presumably both to tangential speed):

http://img198.imageshack.us/img198/5021/thedifferencebetween.jpg I don't understand the difference between those formulas. Our lecturer wrote us that in "industrial usage" f = n (where f is 1/T). But I don't see the connection.
 
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Those formulas are essentially the same. For whatever reason, the second formula uses n for the frequency. (Think n = number of cycles per second.)
 
I see it now :) Thanks Doc.
 
I understand that V is tangential speed, and that acceleration is centripetal acceleration. But is there also a beast known as tangential acceleration? I thought the only two players here are the two mentioned first.
 
Femme_physics said:
I understand that V is tangential speed, and that acceleration is centripetal acceleration. But is there also a beast known as tangential acceleration? I thought the only two players here are the two mentioned first.

In general a speed V has a tangential and a radial component.
Same thing for acceleration - it has a tangential and a radial component.

The case of circular movement is special in that the acceleration only has a radial (or centripetal) component.
Furthermore, the speed only has a tangential component.
 
Femme_physics said:
I understand that V is tangential speed, and that acceleration is centripetal acceleration. But is there also a beast known as tangential acceleration?
In the case of non-uniform circular motion there will be tangential acceleration as well as radial acceleration. Uniform circular motion means constant speed, so the tangential acceleration would be zero.
 
  • #10
tiny-tim said:
(oh, and centripetal acceleration is minus radial acceleration)
Did you mean to say that the centripetal acceleration direction is opposite to the radial vector?

The accelerations are the same:

\vec{F_c}/m = -\omega^2r \hat{r} = \ddot{\vec{r}}

AM
 
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  • #11
Andrew Mason said:
Did you mean to say that the centripetal acceleration direction is opposite to the radial vector?

The accelerations are the same:

F_c/m = -\omega^2 r\hat r = \ddot{\vec{r}}

AM

Hi Andrew! :smile:

(not enough {} :wink:)

Yes … eg a centripetal acceleration of 5 m/s2 would be a radial acceleration of -5 m/s2 :wink:
 
  • #12
I can see clearly now :) Tangential acceleration only occurs when there's a force applied. Thanks tiny-tim, ILS, Doc, Andrew. Being in mechanics class for the past 4 hours also helped!
 
  • #13
Femme_physics said:
Tangential acceleration only occurs when there's a force applied.
Any acceleration--including centripetal--requires a net force. Better to rephrase your statement like this: Tangential acceleration only occurs when the net force has a tangential component.
 
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