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CIRCULAR MOTION

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WHAT WOULD BE AN ANSWER TO THE FOLLOWING : ... moves faster, the horse on the outside or the ostrich on the inside of the ride ? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CIRCULAR MOTION


1
CIRCULAR MOTION
CIRCULAR MOTION
  • The motion of
  • things that rotate

2
Whats this section about ?
  • WHAT WOULD BE AN ANSWER TO THE FOLLOWING
  • On a merry-go-round, which moves faster, the
    horse on the outside or the ostrich on the inside
    of the ride ?
  • At 6-Flags Over Mid-America, why dont the people
    on the highland fling fall off when the platform
    is raised?
  • When you swing something over your head at the
    end of a string and the string breaks, does the
    object continue in the same direction or does it
    fly directly outward?
  • Why are the astronauts in the ISS (international
    space station) floating weightlessly about when
    future space missions will be in craft to
    rotating to create near normal gravity?

3
ROTATION and REVOLUTION
  • Any object (or person) that is turning does so
    about an imaginary straight line called an axis.
  • For example, a carnival ride, a skater or a
    planet.
  • If the axis is located with the body of (internal
    to) the object, the motion is called rotation or
    spin.
  • If the object is turning around an external axis,
    the motion is called a revolution.

AXIS
rotation
CRASH !
revolution
4
ROTATION and REVOLUTION
  • Or, to put it another way,

The disc ROTATES about its internal
axis
Woah!
ROTATION
REVOLUTION
While the bug REVOLVES about an external axis
5
ROTATION and REVOLUTION
  • The planets follow this same rule
  • They REVOLVE around the sun, while
    . ROTATING on their axes.

6
A Trivial Science Note
  • It takes 365 ΒΌ days for the earth to revolve once
    about the sun. This is why there is a leap year
    every 4 years, to catch up with the extra quarter
    day not used each year.
  • It takes 24 hours for a point on the surface of
    the Earth to rotate back around directly under
    the sun again.
  • But it takes only 23 hours and 56 minutes for a
    point on the surface of the Earth to rotate back
    under the stars again. This is because that as
    the Earth rotates, it revolves about a degree
    around the sun in its orbit.

7
ROTATIONAL MOTION
  • Lets start with a few definitions
  • Linear Speed The distance moved per unit of
    time. The linear speed at a point on the outer
    edge of a rotating object is greater than the
    linear speed at any point nearer the axis because
    the point nearer the edge moves a greater
    distance in each revolution.
  • Tangential Speed Refers to the speed of
    something moving along a circular path where the
    direction of motion is always tangent to the
    circle.
  • Rotational Speed (angular speed) The number of
    rotations per unit of time (ex rpm, or r/sec.)
    also refers to the rate of rotation.

8
ROTATIONAL MOTION
Three times as fast
Twice as fast
3
fast
  • For Example
  • The crankshaft in a car turns at around 3000
    rotations per minute (rpm) for optimal power.
  • Any points on or in (all parts of) the crankshaft
    are turning at the same rotational speed.
  • This works for any system where all parts have
    the same rotational speed (like a rotating disk
    or rod).
  • The tangential speed (tangential velocity v),
    rotational speed (angular velocity ?), and
    radial distance from the axis of
    rotation (radius r ) are related in
    the equation v r . ?

2
1
9
To Demonstrate that Tangential Speed Depends on
the Radius of a Rotating Object
  • Consider what happens when a cylinder like a can
    and a conical (tapered) cylinder like a Styrofoam
    cup are rolled along a surface.
  • The wide end of the cup has a greater radius,
    thus a greater linear speed and covers more
    distance as it rotates than the narrow end.
  • The difference in the way these two objects roll
    shows that linear speed does depend on radius.

10
QUESTIONS
  • 1. Which part of the Earths surface has the
    greatest rotational . speed about the Earths
    axis?
  • Which part has the greatest linear speed
    relative to the . Earths axis ?
  • ANSWER
  • All places on the surface of the Earth have
    the same . rotational speed.
  • Because they are farther from the axis,
    regions along . the equator have the
    greatest linear (tangential) speed.

Were going faster !
Maybe, but were all going the same rotational
speed !
11
QUESTIONS (Continued)
  • 2. On a merry-go-round, animals at the edge are
    located 3 . times farther from the axis
    of rotation than the animals near . the
    center. If the animal near the center has a
    rotational . speed of 4 RPM and a
    tangential speed of 2 m/sec., what is . the
    rotational speed and the tangential speed of an
    animal . near the edge.
  • All of the animals are rotating at 4 RPM,
    but the . tangential speed of
    the animals at the edge is 3 x 2 . 6
    m/sec since they are 3 times the distance from
    the . axis or center of the
    merry-go-round.
  • 3. Train tracks are made up of a pair of rails.
    For straight-line . motion, the rails are
    the same length. But which rail is .
    longer for a curve, the outside rail or the
    inside rail?
  • The outside rail is longer, it has the
    greater radius.

12
Railroads Rolling on Tapered Wheels
The wheels of a train are tapered. When the train
makes a turn the smaller diameter part of the
taper rides on the inside track while the larger
part of the taper rides on the outer track. With
both wheels rotating at the same speed, the outer
wheel has a greater linear speed and so moves
around the curve.
  • The wheels of a train are tapered.
  • When the train makes a turn the smaller diameter
    part of the taper rides on the inside track while
    the larger part of the taper rides on the outer
    track.
  • With both wheels rotating at the same speed, the
    outer wheel has a greater linear speed and so
    moves around the curve.

13
Rolling on Tapered Wheels
  • Like railroad wheels, a pair of styrofoam cups
    taped together rolls very well along a set of
    tracks, (but not on the surface of a table).
  • The cups in this
    configuration are

    self-correcting.
  • When the wider part
    of one cup
    rides the track,
    it moves faster than the
    narrow
    part of the other cup on the other
    track to steer the cups
    back toward
    the middle of the tracks.
  • Cups arranged in the opposite
    configuration cannot stay on the tracks at
    all.

14
CENTRIPETAL FORCE
  • To make any object continuously travel in a
    circle, a continuous pull must be
    maintained inward toward the center of the
    circle.
  • This center seeking or center directed force or
    tension is called CENTRIPETAL FORCE.
  • CENTRIPETAL FORCE is
    not new, but simply the
    name
    given to any force directed at
    a right angle to
    the path of a
    moving object that tends to
    produce circular motion.

15
CENTRIPETAL FORCE
  • Gravitational force directed toward the center of
    the Earth holds the Moon in an almost circular
    orbit even across empty space
  • Electrical forces directed inward toward the
    nucleus keep electrons in orbitals about an atom.
  • The sideways acting friction between the road and
    the tires of a car provide the centripetal force
    to keep the car on a curved path around a corner.
  • If there is not enough friction, the car will go
    into a skid.
  • Centrifuges use centripetal force to separate
    different sized particles.

16
Centripetal and Centrifugal Forces
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