Hi lethe (Bailey and Damgo, please read!),
today I have plenty of time and I will dedicate some time to you to...
Originally posted by lethe
F = mω2r
Without any remark on the direction and origin of this force this is just a 'raw' formula. I could not understand what you meant and this is the main reason why I have not commented on it before.
anyway: i fail to see what is wrong with my formula. radial acceleration is given by this formula. you have a constant ù, acceleration goes as r, so you have an exponentially increasing radius for the duration of the rotation.
nobody said your formula is wrong, it just needed some explanations.
It seems like you want to solve the problem in the non-inertial frame that rotates with the spoke. And this is fine by me, it is actually a beautiful alternative solution that gives further insight in the physics of rotations but you have to explain it...
...just saying that there is a
"radial" acceleration is a statement that need some clarification:
in the inertial frame the acceleration along the radial direction is zero(!) in this problem because of the absence of friction, nevertheless there is a non-zero second derivative of the radial position! This is because of the way derivatives transform under a change of coordinates like the cartesian to polar I used.
When you change reference frame to the co-rotating one (same origin in the center of the wheel) the radial acceleration appears as a result of the fictitious centrifugal force. This is equivalent in the equation of motion in polar coordinates to move one of the terms that give the total radial acceleration on the force side of the equation:
Frad=m*Arad
0=m*(d^2r/dt^2-r*(dθ/dt)^2)
becomes
m*r*(dθ/dt)^2=m*(d^2r/dt^2)
clear!?
this seems believable to me, since the moment of inertia of the system will be increasing quadratically, and to keep the constant angular acceleration, you would have to constant pump in an amount of energy proportional to the moment of inertia.
it is the pseudoforce that any object in an accelerating frame feels (like in a rotating frame). it acts radially outward, pushing the mass away from the center.
Moment of inertia will increase quadratically with respect to position but this is by its definition. I guess you mean "to keep constant angular
speed"!?
If you want to go into energy considerations is much better if you consider the variation of the total energy in either the inertial or non-inertial frame.
In the inertial frame there is only kynetic energy and, yes, its variation depends only on the variation of the moment of inertia. But in the reference frame you have chosen you have to include the potential of the centrifugal force!
Any remark? :)
Hope this helped, Dario