masudr said:
I'm sure it's given by a factor multiplied by 1-\cos(\theta)
Absolutely. (For the minimum speed case.)
IMGOOD said:
Really!? What provides that force (not the centrifugal force I presume because it doesn't exist)?
The normal force is the force that the track exerts on the coaster, so it's
the track that exerts the normal force. But I suspect what you really want to know is something like: What makes the track exert such a normal force?
Isn't the normal force exist because of the force of gravity (the force of gravity pushes the roller coaster which in turn pushes the track and the track then pushes back the roller coaster and hence producing a normal force)? And at the very top, there is no force pushing the coaster up and thus no foce pushing the track and hence the normal force is zero.
Think of it like this: We are forcing a high-speed coaster to move along a curved track. We know this requires a centripetal force. Unless something pushes it, forcing it to turn, the coaster will go straight (Newton's 1st law). The track will not let that happen--you try to blast straight through it, and it pushes you aside. That's the normal force. Sometimes gravity is able to provide the full centripetal force (for example, at the top of the loop in the minimum speed case), in which case the track does not have to strain to turn the coaster velocity in a circle.
Imagine the coaster entering that loop with a much faster speed than the minimum. Now at the top of the loop the normal force is not zero, since gravity is not enough to provide the needed centripetal force. Get the coaster going faster and faster... at some point the structure of the track will not be strong enough to create enough normal force--the track falls apart and the coaster goes flying.
The normal force is a "passive" force. It will be whatever it needs to be, up to the limits of the strength of the material (and support structure).
Here's another example of a passive force providing the needed centripetal force: Imagine a rock tied to a string being twirled in a vertical circle (like the roller coaster track). The tension in the string now plays the role that the normal force did in the roller coaster example--it will be whatever it needs to be to keep from being pulled apart. And in the process of resisting being torn apart, it provides the needed centripetal force. But if you spin the rock too fast, the string will not have the strength to keep itself together--it will break and the rock will go flying. (Note that in this case there is again a minimum speed that will keep the string taut as it goes around the top of the loop. The very same force equations apply, replacing "normal force" with string tension.)
Let me know if this helps.