What is the role of centripetal force in vertical circular motion?

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Centripetal force plays a crucial role in vertical circular motion, particularly at the top and bottom of the circular path where an object maintains uniform circular motion. At these points, the net force acting on the object is entirely centripetal, allowing for constant speed despite changes in direction. In contrast, during the motion between the top and bottom, both centripetal and tangential forces are present, leading to variations in speed. The tension in the string and the gravitational force can be resolved into components, affecting the object's acceleration. Understanding the distinction between centripetal and tangential forces as components of the net force is essential for analyzing vertical circular motion.
Hamish Cruickshank
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I am having some difficulty in understanding vertical circular motion.

As I understand it, the only time the object (lets say an aeroplane flying in a vertical circle) is in uniform circular motion is at the top and the bottom of the circular path.

So if you want to find the net force on an object at the top of the circle it will be the centripetal force, because in UCM the net force is the centripetal force.

Is this right?
 
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Generally uniform circular motion means a constant speed throughout the circle...

In the case of a ball attaches to a string going through a vertical circle... you don't have uniform circular motion... however at the top and bottom we do have dv/dt = 0 where v is the speed of the ball (careful to note, acceleration is not 0, ie: \frac{d\vec{v}}{dt} is not 0 because direction is changing)...

This happens because the net force is centripetal at the top and bottom. The tension and gravity both act along the radius of the circle... There is no tangential component to the net force, so speed is constant at this moment... tangential force changes speed... centripetal force doesn't (centripetal force only changes direction).

However, in between the top and bottom we have a centripetal force and a tangential force. The tension acts along the radius... but gravity can be divided into 2 perpendicular components... one along the radius and one tangent to the circle... this results in a changing speed...

Centripetal vs. tangential are "components" of the net force... (don't think of them as independent forces in and of themselves... they are components of the net force which in this case is the vector sum of tension and gravity).
 
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