Non-central force and work done

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
3 replies · 2K views
Samia qureshi
Messages
23
Reaction score
1
Member advised to use the homework template for posts in the homework sections of PF.
when we start from a point say 'O' cover some distance and back to same point work done in the case is zero.will it be zero too for the non-central force as given below in pic.. am i solving it in the right way?
que2.jpg
:oldconfused:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Samia qureshi said:
when we start from a point say 'O' cover some distance and back to same point work done in the case is zero.will it be zero too for the non-central force as given below in pic.. am i solving it in the right way?

i do not understand your differential d(phi) ; how this is defined...
well you have a force which has two parts radial one F(r) and F(theta) the motion is in a plane (r, theta) so any displacement has two parts ;
as it is moving in a circle r is not changing so no work done by the radial force ...as regards theta part as the angle is changing and it returns to the same point after covering 2.pi angle ...
how come the work done will be zero ...so try to analyse your answer.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Samia qureshi
drvrm said:
i do not understand your differential d(phi) ; how this is defined...
well you have a force which has two parts radial one F(r) and F(theta) the motion is in a plane (r, theta) so any displacement has two parts ;
as it is moving in a circle r is not changing so no work done by the radial force ...as regards theta part as the angle is changing and it returns to the same point after covering 2.pi angle ...
how come the work done will be zero ...so try to analyse your answer.
means if angle changes work done will not b zero? if angle changes and still it returns to same point then will it b zero?