The question of circular motion in future

AI Thread Summary
Circular motion is integral to the operation of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which uses electric and magnetic fields to accelerate particles in a circular path, allowing for efficient space usage. The discussion highlights the potential future applications of circular motion in technology, suggesting that many future innovations will involve moving parts or electrical components. While the LHC exemplifies current applications, the conversation emphasizes the need for clarity on what "future" entails in terms of technological advancements. The concept of circular motion extends beyond current technologies to include fundamental principles in atomic structures, such as electron orbitals. Overall, circular motion will likely remain a crucial aspect of future developments across various fields.
himhim11
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i want to know some applications(idear) about circular motion in future.

Is Large Hadron Collider, LHC about circular motion?

PLZ,HELP
 
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First of all, what do you mean by "in the future?"

Second, yes, the LHC uses circular motion, but only because that allows it to let particles spin indefinitely without using up a ridiculous amount of space, I think.

If the LHC is a cyclotron (which I'm pretty sure it is), it uses electric fields to accelerate particles and magnetic fields to keep them moving in a circle. So it uses circular motion, but how it works doesn't really rely on it.
 
himhim11 said:
i want to know some applications(idear) about circular motion in future.
A wheel in cars?

Your question is way too general to give a useful answer.

Btw.: Protons in the LHC can travel a distance which is equivalent to the distance sun<->neptune, sometimes even more than that. It would be... tricky to achieve this in a linear accelerator.
 
Whovian said:
First of all, what do you mean by "in the future?"

Second, yes, the LHC uses circular motion, but only because that allows it to let particles spin indefinitely without using up a ridiculous amount of space, I think.

If the LHC is a cyclotron (which I'm pretty sure it is), it uses electric fields to accelerate particles and magnetic fields to keep them moving in a circle. So it uses circular motion, but how it works doesn't really rely on it.

in the future mean that technique, technology, application are researched. we will use it in the future. it only can have a idea about circular motion. it's fine.
 
mfb said:
A wheel in cars?

Your question is way too general to give a useful answer.

Btw.: Protons in the LHC can travel a distance which is equivalent to the distance sun<->neptune, sometimes even more than that. It would be... tricky to achieve this in a linear accelerator.

A wheel in cars is present?

technique, technology, future application.
they may are researched even only have a idea.

I just want to get some points.
It do not need too much detail.
 
I'm quite sure we will continue to use cars tomorrow - and in the next decades. That is in the future.
While the LHC will continue to operate tomorrow (unless something goes wrong), it already did so yesterday.

Something new, which is not present today?
Well, fine. Probably nearly every object with moving parts or electricity which will be built in the future.
If you consider orbitals of electrons in atoms as "circular motion": Every object made out of atoms. Which is "every object", unless something really surprising happens.
 
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