Chen
- 976
- 1
A motorcycle is driving along the walls of a round ring, which is rotating at \omega_0. Its speed is constant V, in the same direction of the ring itself. Its mass is m, and the radius of the ring is R. I need to find the normal force that the walls exert on the motorcycle.
If we look at the problem from the motorcycle's reference frame, then it is stationary in a frame that is rotating at \omega = (\omega_0 + V/R), so the normal force is equal to the centrifugal force:
N = m\omega^2R = m(\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2R
Now, if we look at this from the ring's reference frame, then the motorcycle is moving at a constant speed V inside the ring which is rotating at \omega_0. Then we also need to take into account coriolis effect (right?), and the forces in the radial axis are:
N + 2m\omega_0v - m\omega_0^2R = 0
But the normal force is the same, no matter which frame we use, so:
m\omega_0^2R - 2m\omega_0v = m(\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2R
\omega_0^2 - 2\omega_0\frac{v}{R} = (\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2
And that's obviously incorrect... so can someone please point out my mistakes?
Thanks,
Chen
If we look at the problem from the motorcycle's reference frame, then it is stationary in a frame that is rotating at \omega = (\omega_0 + V/R), so the normal force is equal to the centrifugal force:
N = m\omega^2R = m(\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2R
Now, if we look at this from the ring's reference frame, then the motorcycle is moving at a constant speed V inside the ring which is rotating at \omega_0. Then we also need to take into account coriolis effect (right?), and the forces in the radial axis are:
N + 2m\omega_0v - m\omega_0^2R = 0
But the normal force is the same, no matter which frame we use, so:
m\omega_0^2R - 2m\omega_0v = m(\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2R
\omega_0^2 - 2\omega_0\frac{v}{R} = (\omega_0 + \frac{v}{R})^2
And that's obviously incorrect... so can someone please point out my mistakes?
Thanks,
Chen
I was thinking in terms of an inertial frame (the easy way to solve this problem) compared to the bike's frame (in which its speed is zero). From the ring frame, there is a coriolis force, of course.