Proving Centripetal Acceleration Physically?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around proving centripetal acceleration through a physical project rather than relying solely on formulas. Participants are exploring various methods and setups that can demonstrate this concept practically.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants suggest various physical setups, including using a bucket of water, carousel swings, and pendulums. There are inquiries about the effectiveness of these methods and the feasibility of constructing experiments with available materials.

Discussion Status

Some participants have offered specific project ideas and equipment suggestions, while others express concerns about the practicality of certain methods. The conversation reflects a mix of brainstorming and questioning the viability of proposed experiments.

Contextual Notes

There are mentions of constraints such as the availability of lab equipment and the challenges of conducting experiments that involve water or require precise measurements.

HTHLAndre
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How Can I Prove this Physically

Homework Statement


[/B]
So I need to do a project where I prove centripetal acceleration. All the cases I've seen of where it's proved is using formulas, though I need an actual project.

By an actual project I mean something like http://jedlik.phy.bme.hu/~hartlein/www.mip.berkeley.edu/images/physics/A+0+47.gif

Does anybody know how I can prove centripetal acceleration with a physical project behind it?
Yes it can involve forumlas, equations also. Though I still need a project for it.

Homework Equations


a = v^2/r


3. The Attempt at a Solution
Bucket of water - No way of proving so far.
 
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If you school doesn't have lab equipment for studying centripetal acceleration and force, you could build it: http://www.physics.fsu.edu/users/ng/Courses/phy2053c/Labs/Expt03a/Expt03a-3.htm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Stephen Tashi said:
If you school doesn't have lab equipment for studying centripetal acceleration and force, you could build it: http://www.physics.fsu.edu/users/ng/Courses/phy2053c/Labs/Expt03a/Expt03a-3.htm
I'm looking for something a bit simpler, thanks though :)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Carousel swing
Some other rotating object on a playground
Simple pendulum: weight hanging from a wire describing circles.
 
HTHLAndre said:
Bucket of water - No way of proving so far.

Why isn't the bucket thing working? Hold a small bucket of water upside down, the water falls. Rotate it, the water doesn't fall.
 
Turning the bucket thing into a physics learning experience (something to hypothesize, something to measure, something to evaluate) project worth a marking is hard (and wet).
 
Haha! It might get a bit wet, yes. But it you can get a small bucket, its pretty much feasible.
 
HTHL, do you have something available that rotates at a reasonable speed ? Lego with a little motor, meccano (Ha, mid 20th century -- shows my age :( ), ceiling fan ?
Anything resembling a carousel swing.
Hang a little weight from a wire and measure the angle as a function of rpm, radius, weight, wire length, time of day, etc... Real physics for you !
How to measure accurately ? Another physics challenge! (although with these thingies nowadays..)
And if you insist on getting wet: angle of liquid in a bucket on a turntable in the playground ! As a function of rpm, radius, temperature,
 
Last edited:
siddharth23 said:
Haha! It might get a bit wet, yes. But it you can get a small bucket, its pretty much feasible.
Thanks for the answer! :)
BvU said:
HTHL, do you have something available that rotates at a reasonable speed ? Lego with a little motor, meccano (Ha, mid 20th centrury -- shows my age :( ), ceiling fan ?
Anything resembling a carousel swing.
Hang a little weight from a wire and measure the angle as a function of rpm, radius, weight, wire length, time of day, etc... Real physics for you !
How to measure accurately ? Another physics challenge! (although with these thingies nowadays..)
And if you insist on getting wet: angle of liquid in a bucket on a turntable in the playground ! As a function of rpm, radius, temperature,
Using a turntable on the playground is actually a good idea to measure the speed, thank you for that!
 
  • #10
HTHLAndre said:
Using a turntable on the playground is actually a good idea to measure the speed, thank you for that!

Measure the speed at which the the kids get thrown off the carousel :-P
 

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