zakh508
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Homework Statement
A pilot of mass m flies a jet plane on a "loop-the-loop" course by flying in a vertical circle of radius R at a constant speed v. The force that the cockpit seat exerts on the pilot at the top of the loop is
(A) mg.
(B) mg\left(\frac{v^{2}}{R+1}\right).
(C) \frac{mv^{2}}{R(g+1)}.
(D) m\left(\frac{v^{2}}{R-g}\right).
(E) \frac{mv^{2}}{R}.
Homework Equations
a_{c}=\frac{v^{2}}{R}
The Attempt at a Solution
I determined that because the centripetal acceleration is pressing the pilot into the seat while gravity is pulling him away from the seat that F_{N}=\frac{v^{2}}{R}-mg. I simplified this to F_{N}=m\left(\frac{v^{2}-g}{R}\right). (Just realized this is wrong, should be F_{N}=m\left(\frac{v^{2}}{R}-g\right)) The only answer in the book close to that is D but I have no idea how g ended up in the denominator. Could the textbook be wrong or am I missing something?
EDIT: The book's explanation is that the normal force plus force of gravity have to equal mass times centripetal acceleration, therefore F_{N}+mg=\frac{mv^{2}}{R} which they simplified to D. So their explanation makes more sense now but I still think it's wrong.
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