Solving a Car's Travel in a Flat Circle - Can You Help?

AI Thread Summary
A car traveling in a flat circle with a radius R has a velocity of 18 m/s west and a total acceleration of 2 m/s² at 46 degrees north of west. The initial calculation using the formula a = v²/R yielded 162 m, but the correct approach requires using the radial component of acceleration. The mistake was in applying the cosine instead of the sine function for the angle when calculating components. After correcting the direction of the angle, the problem was resolved successfully. Understanding the correct application of trigonometric functions is crucial for solving such physics problems.
Xamfy19
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The question is :
A car travel in a flat circle of radius R. At a certain instant the velocity of the car is 18 m/s west and the total acceleration of the car is 2 m/s2 at 46 degrees north of west. What is R?

I simply used a = v2/R and obtained 162 m. I suspected the question should be more complicated than I thought. Can anyone help. Thanks.
 
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The formula u applied is for an so u have to take the component which is in the direction of radius or it shoul be radial component of acceleration. and velocity should be the tangential velocity
 
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thanks, maybe more info needed

I took cos(46) of 2 m/s2 and used for the formula. It's not the correct answer. Do I need to figure out the linear speed? (apparently it is not 18 m/s)?
Thanks alot.
 


Originally posted by Xamfy19
I took cos(46) of 2 m/s2 and used for the formula. It's not the correct answer. Do I need to figure out the linear speed? (apparently it is not 18 m/s)?
The linear speed is 18 m/s, nothing wrong with that.

Draw a picture of what's happening and you will see that you took the component of the acceleration incorrectly.
 
should be sin instead of cos

I guess I've mistaken the direction 46 degrees north of west as west of north. I have just tried again and it worked. Thanks alot.
 
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