What Determines the Direction of Acceleration in Circular Motion?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the direction of acceleration for an object in circular motion, exploring the underlying principles of Newton's laws and the nature of centripetal force and acceleration. The scope includes theoretical aspects and mathematical reasoning related to circular motion.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses confusion about the direction of acceleration in circular motion.
  • Another participant references Newton's second law, stating that acceleration is in the direction of the resultant force and questions where the centripetal force acts.
  • A subsequent post confirms that centripetal force pulls the object towards the center of the circular path.
  • Another participant asserts that centripetal acceleration always acts towards the center of the circle.
  • A more detailed mathematical explanation is provided, describing the trajectory of circular motion and the derivation of velocity and acceleration, highlighting the distinction between tangential and centripetal acceleration.
  • The mathematical formulation indicates that the centripetal acceleration is directed towards the center and is always negative in the context of the derived equations.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree that centripetal acceleration acts towards the center of the circular path. However, there are varying levels of detail and understanding regarding the mathematical descriptions and implications of these concepts, indicating that some aspects of the discussion remain unresolved.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes mathematical derivations that may depend on specific assumptions about the nature of the motion, such as constant radius and uniform circular motion. The implications of tangential acceleration and its relationship to centripetal acceleration are also noted but not fully resolved.

dumbboy340
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My friend and i were having a conversation on circular motion and were confused with the direction of acceleration along that circular path.what will be the direction of acceleration of an object which is in circular motion?
Thank$$!
 
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Newton's second law states that the rate of change of momentum of an object is proportional to the force acting on the object. This means that the acceleration will always be in the same direction as the resultant force. Can you tell me where the centripetal force acts?
 
PWiz said:
Newton's second law states that the rate of change of momentum of an object is proportional to the force acting on the object. This means that the acceleration will always be in the same direction as the resultant force. Can you tell me where the centripetal force acts?

It pulls the object towards the centre of circular path..
 
Precisely. Centripetal acceleration always acts towards the center of the circle.
 
Thanks!
 
Well, the most general circular motion can be described by an angle ##\phi(t)##. Let the circle be in the origin of the ##xy## plane. Then the trajectory is given by
$$\vec{x}(t)=R \begin{pmatrix} \cos[\phi(t)] \\ \sin [\phi(t)] \end{pmatrix}.$$
Now you have to take the 1st and 2nd time derivatives to get velocity and acceleration:
$$\vec{v}(t)=\dot{\vec{x}}(t)=R \dot{\phi}(t) \begin{pmatrix} -\sin[\phi(t)] \\ \cos[\phi(t)] \end{pmatrix},$$
$$\vec{a}(t)=\dot{\vec{v}}(t)=\ddot{\vec{x}}(t) = R \ddot{\phi}(t) \begin{pmatrix} -\sin[\phi(t)] \\ \cos[\phi(t)] \end{pmatrix}-R \dot{\phi}^2(t) \begin{pmatrix} \cos[\phi(t)] \\ \sin [\phi(t)] \end{pmatrix}.$$
As you see, the velocity is (as for any motion) always pointing along the tangent of the trajectory. The acceleration splits into two parts: The tangential acceleration of magnitude (and sign wrt. the direction of the tangent vector) ##a_{\parallel}=R \ddot{\phi}## and one perpendicular, i.e., along the position vector. The component is ##a_{\perp}=-R \dot{\phi}^2 \leq 0##, which means it's always negative, i.e., directed towards the center. The prependicular component is called centripetal acceleration.

According to Newton's Law to maintain this motion you need the total force
$$\vec{F}=m \vec{a}.$$
The part in direction perpendicular to the trajectory is called centripetal force.
 
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