arman.raina said:
Thank you. All are functions of time. I have not figured out how to write a subscript of 't' on a, to indicate tangential acceleration.
Either:
at or ##\vec a_t## ... click on the "quote" button attached to the bottom of this post to see how I did that.
In the advanced editor, there is a button that looks like X
2 that will put the "sub" tags around highlighted text ... makes it easier.
so sr/dt=v(r)which is actually v subscript r of t. a⊥=2ω(dr/dt). Does that make sense?
Sure - though it can get eye-watering to follow.
v(r) would normally mean that the velocity depends on the radius though ... vr(r) would mean that the radial velocity depends on the radius.
The initial and final radial velocities would be vri and vrf respectively and after that it gets nasty.
But better to write v
r and even better ##v_r## ... or just avoid subscripts whenever possible by defining "v is the radial velocity and ω is the angular velocity - the tangential velocity is rω" or whatever takes your fancy ... no subscripts needed see?
It follows from 2(dr/dt)(dθ/dt)-(r)(d^2θ/dt^2)=0
r is the magnitude of r. θ is the angle of r.
Um... $$2\frac{dr}{dt}\frac{d\theta}{dt}-r\frac{d^2\theta}{dt^2}=0:\;\vec{r}=(x,y,z), r=\sqrt{x^2+y^2+z^2}$$
... that what you mean?
... but where did the "2" out the front come from?
Let's see, the LHS would be the time derivative of the tangential velocity: $$\frac{d}{dt}\left( r\frac{d\theta}{dt} \right)=0$$ ... means that the tangential speed is a constant. That what you want?
You then describe something in motion with the following relation:
Now, if I understand you correctly, you man that the radius r varies with time.
If you also want the tangential velocity to be a constant, then the object is moving under power rather than orbiting a central body. (Either that or the radius isn't changing with time.) Is this what you had in mind?