Rolling without slipping and acceleration

In summary: The particle does experience radial acceleration at the lowermost point, so why can't it experience acceleration at the...lowermost point?
  • #1
andyrk
658
5
Why don't we consider radial acceleration on the lowermost point in rolling without slipping?
 
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  • #2
Your question is a little vague - can you be more specific? What is the situation? Don't consider radial acceleration while finding out what?
 
  • #3
While rolling without slipping of a solid sphere of a solid cylinder or a hollow cylinder or a hollow sphere.
 
  • #4
At the moment that a point on the circumference of the wheel touches the ground, what are its acceleration and velocity?
It might help to think about a short time before it touches the ground. Where is the instantaneous centre of rotation of the wheel, and how far from that is the point that's soon to make contact?
 
  • #5
Well, there is no force providing torque, so why should there be any angular acceleration? That is why I asked you to be specific - are you considering a situation where there is friction acting on the lowermost point or not?
 
  • #6
dreamLord said:
Well, there is no force providing torque, so why should there be any angular acceleration? That is why I asked you to be specific - are you considering a situation where there is friction acting on the lowermost point or not?
No matter if friction is there or not. It is rolling without slipping and the conditions needed for that have been taken care of by the question/problem/examiner who made the question.(Though those conditions haven't been specified). And I didn't ask whether there would be any angular acceleration or not. I am talking about RADIAL acceleration that a particle executing circular motion experiences which is towards the centre (centripetal: centre seeking). So that's what I am saying. In rolling without slipping, the lowermost point is instantaneously at rest, but an instant later it has kicked back up and allowed a different point to come to the lowermost position. So why does the particle kick back up? Does it have something to do with the radial acceleration of the particle? Does the radial acceleration play any role in rolling without slipping or not?
 
  • #7
andyrk said:
I am talking about RADIAL acceleration that a particle executing circular motion experiences which is towards the centre (centripetal: centre seeking). So that's what I am saying.

Does the radial acceleration play any role in rolling without slipping or not?

Have you not answered your own question?
 
  • #8
voko said:
Have you not answered your own question?

I don't think so because I still haven't come to a conclusion as of yet.
 
  • #9
andyrk said:
I don't think so because I still haven't come to a conclusion as of yet.

Yes you have: "I am talking about RADIAL acceleration that a particle executing circular motion experiences which is towards the centre (centripetal: centre seeking)."

You stated quite plainly that anything in circular motion experiences radial acceleration.
 
  • #10
voko said:
Yes you have. You stated quite plainly that anything in circular motion experiences radial acceleration.

Yes, what effect does it have on the lowermost point in contact with the surface? By the virtue of what does it kick back up while pure rolling?
 
  • #11
My apologies, I misread your question as one of angular acceleration. Radial acceleration is present for all circular motions - it is in fact a definition. It is present because of the internal forces in the body, and hence we do not consider it explicitly as such.
 
  • #12
andyrk said:
Yes, what effect does it have on the lowermost point in contact with the surface? By the virtue of what does it kick back up while pure rolling?

By the virtue of centripetal acceleration, just like you said.
 
  • #13
voko said:
By the virtue of centripetal acceleration, just like you said.
But the radial acceleration of the lowermost point is straight back up normal to the surface. But the lowermost point moves diagonally upwards, i.e along the circular arc. Is it because while the lowermost point tends to move up, the rolling object is also rotating so it goes along the arc? Kind of like the Coriolis Effect?
 
  • #14
andyrk said:
But the radial acceleration of the lowermost point is straight back up normal to the surface. But the lowermost point moves diagonally upwards, i.e along the circular arc. Is it because while the lowermost point tends to move up, the rolling object is also rotating so it goes along the arc? Kind of like the Coriolis Effect?

The Coriolis effect is irrelevant here, but otherwise your observation is correct. In a frame co-moving with the rolling body, the lowermost point is moving horizontally backwards, and the upward acceleration tilts the velocity vector up.
 
  • #15
andyrk, pls try to answer my questions in post #4. You will find that in an inertial frame the point of the wheel in contact is not accelerating.
 
  • #16
haruspex said:
andyrk, pls try to answer my questions in post #4. You will find that in an inertial frame the point of the wheel in contact is not accelerating.

The particle does experience radial acceleration at the lowermost point, so why can't it experience acceleration at the lowermost point in an inertial frame?
 
  • #17
andyrk said:
The particle does experience radial acceleration at the lowermost point
Do the algebra. Suppose the point of interest is about to contact the ground. It still has an angle theta to go. If the radius of the wheel is r, what is its height from the ground? What does that approximate to for small theta? Writing theta = -ωt, constant ω, what does that give you for the vertical acceleration?
Remember, it has no centripetal acceleration since it has no tangential velocity.
 
  • #18
haruspex said:
Do the algebra. Suppose the point of interest is about to contact the ground. It still has an angle theta to go. If the radius of the wheel is r, what is its height from the ground? What does that approximate to for small theta? Writing theta = -ωt, constant ω, what does that give you for the vertical acceleration?
Remember, it has no centripetal acceleration since it has no tangential velocity.

Height of the point is r-rθ=r(1-θ)
Ok yes I get you. Every particle executing circular motion has a centripetal acceleration but also one condition should be that at all points of time its velocity should be tangential to the circular trajectory. Then if the particle doesn't have any radial as well as tangential acceleration how does the particle go back up?
 
  • #19
andyrk said:
Height of the point is r-rθ=r(1-θ)
No, it's r(1- cosθ). What does that approximate for small θ?
However, I now realize my earlier responses were wrong. Here's what I should have written:
The point of contact does accelerate upwards, but whether you consider it centripetal acceleration depends on your frame of reference. If you're moving with the velocity of the wheel's centre (as someone already posted on this thread) it looks like centripetal acceleration, rω2. But viewed from the roadside, that point has no forward movement, and is itself the centre of rotation, so cannot have centripetal acceleration. But its vertical position is r(1-cosθ) ≈ rθ2/2 = rω2t2/2. Differentiating twice, it has vertical acceleration rω2, as required.
 
Last edited:

1. What is rolling without slipping?

Rolling without slipping is a motion in which an object, such as a wheel or ball, moves in a straight line while simultaneously rotating about its axis without any sliding or slipping.

2. What is the difference between rolling without slipping and rolling with slipping?

The main difference between rolling without slipping and rolling with slipping is that in rolling without slipping, the point of contact between the object and the surface remains stationary, while in rolling with slipping, there is sliding or slipping between the two surfaces.

3. How is acceleration related to rolling without slipping?

In rolling without slipping, the acceleration of the object can be calculated using the equation a = αr, where a is the linear acceleration, α is the angular acceleration, and r is the radius of the object. This means that the linear and angular accelerations are directly proportional to each other.

4. Can an object roll without slipping if it is on an inclined plane?

Yes, an object can still roll without slipping on an inclined plane as long as the force of friction between the object and the surface is sufficient to prevent slipping. The angle of the incline will affect the magnitude of the force of friction required to maintain rolling without slipping.

5. How does the distribution of mass affect rolling without slipping?

The distribution of mass in an object affects its ability to roll without slipping. For example, an object with a larger mass concentrated at its center of mass will have a lower moment of inertia and will be easier to roll without slipping compared to an object with a larger mass distributed farther away from its center of mass.

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