Tangential acceleration, linear acceleration, and torque

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Discussion Overview

The discussion focuses on the differences between tangential and linear acceleration in the context of circular motion, specifically regarding a ball. It also examines the role of torque in contributing to linear acceleration, exploring definitions and relationships between these concepts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants inquire about the definitions of linear and angular acceleration and the level of physics being discussed (calculus-based or algebra-based).
  • One participant states that tangential acceleration is the rate of change of tangential velocity and occurs when speed is not constant, while radial acceleration is always present and points towards the center of the circle.
  • A participant presents a mathematical relationship involving torque and its effect on angular acceleration, suggesting that torque influences tangential acceleration through the equation τ = d(Iω)/dt.
  • There is a request for clarification on the search terms used in prior research, indicating uncertainty about the level of detail that can be provided in responses.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying levels of understanding and seek clarification on definitions and concepts. There is no consensus on the specific details of the topic, and multiple viewpoints regarding the definitions and relationships remain present.

Contextual Notes

Some assumptions about the definitions of acceleration types and the mathematical relationships involved are not fully explored. The discussion also reflects a dependency on the level of physics knowledge of participants, which remains unspecified.

blueblast
What is the difference between tangential and linear acceleration of a circular object (let's say a ball)? Also, how does the torque contribute to linear acceleration?
 
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What did you find during your quest on the net ?
 
BvU said:
What did you find during your quest on the net ?
Not much.
 
Let us start from the definitions. What is linear acceleration, and what is angular accelertion? Also, at what level are you looking at the topic, calculus based physics, or algebra based physics?
 
blueblast said:
Not much.
Is an answer to the question how much did you find...", not to the question "what did you find" ...

Let me rephrase: what search terms did you use and which results did you like, which did you not like ?

Reason I ask is that I have no idea what level of answer I can give. Do you already know what the terms stand for, and want something specific on a spherical object (a ball is not a circular object) ?
 
Tangential and radial acceleration are both types of linear acceleration. Tangential acceleration is the rate of change of the tangential velocity and arises when the speed around the circle is not constant; radial acceleration will always be present (including for constant speeds) and points to the centre of the circle. The other type of acceleration would be angular acceleration.

Now, let's explore how exactly the torque affects the tangential acceleration.

\tau = \frac{d(Iw)}{dt} = I \frac{dw}{dt} We know this because the net torque is equal to the rate of change of angular momentum.
So \frac{dw}{dt} = \frac{\tau}{I}
\frac{dv}{dt} = \frac{d(wr)}{dt} = r \frac{dw}{dt} = r \frac{\tau}{I}

Here, v represents tangential velocity, which is equivalent to wr.
 

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