1 / 26

BTE 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCES

BTE 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCES. 13. CENTRIPETAL AND CENTRIFUGAL FORCE. NAZARIN B. NORDIN nazarin@icam.edu.my. What you will learn:. Centripetal force: acceleration, centrifugal force/ acceleration, mass-radius polygons Centrifugal force applied to wheel balancing/ clutches, governors

eros
Download Presentation

BTE 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BTE 1013 ENGINEERING SCIENCES 13. CENTRIPETAL AND CENTRIFUGAL FORCE NAZARIN B. NORDIN nazarin@icam.edu.my

  2. What you will learn: • Centripetal force: acceleration, centrifugal force/ acceleration, mass-radius polygons • Centrifugal force applied to wheel balancing/ clutches, governors • Curved tracks: vehicles overturning/ sliding on level track, vehicles on banked track

  3. ANGULAR DISPLACEMENT • Angular displacement (q ) is usually expressed in radians, in degrees, or in revolutions.

  4. 6 segments gets to here. One radian is the angle subtended at the center of a circle by an arc equal in length to the radius of the circle. 2 3 1 57.30 2p segments gets completely around. 4 6 5 1 rev = 3600 = 2p radians (rad)

  5. Thus the angle q in radians is given in terms of the arc length l it subtends on a circle of radius r by The radian measure of an angle is a dimensionless number.

  6. THE ANGULAR SPEED The angular speed (w ) of an object whose axis of rotation is fixed is the rate at which its angular coordinate, the angular displacement q, changes with time. If q changes from qi to qf in a time t, then the average angular speed is

  7. The units of are exclusively rad/s. Since each complete turn or cycle of a revolving system carries it through 2p rad • w = 2p f. • f is the frequency in revolutions per second, rotations per second, or cycles per second. • Accordingly, w is called the angular frequency. We can associate a direction with w and thereby create a vector quantity.

  8. THE ANGULAR ACCELERATION • The angular acceleration (a ) of an object whose axis of rotation is fixed is the rate at which its angular speed changes with time. • If the angular speed changes uniformly from wi to wf in the time t, then the angular acceleration is constant and

  9. The units of a are typically rad/s2, rev/min2, and such. It is possible to associate a direction with w, and therefore with a, thereby specifying the angular acceleration vector a, but we will have no need to do so here.

  10. Equations for uniformly accelerated angular motion are exactly analogous to those for uniformly accelerated linear motion. In the usual notation we have:

  11. RELATIONS BETWEEN ANGULAR AND TANGENTIAL QUANTITIES: • When a wheel of radius r rotates about an axis whose direction is fixed, a point on the rim of the wheel is described in terms of the circumferential distance l it has moved, its tangential speed v, and its tangential acceleration aT. • These quantities are related to the angular quantities q, w, and a, which describe the rotation of the wheel, through the relations:

  12. provided radian measure is used for q, w, and a. • By simple reasoning, l can be shown to be the length of belt wound on the wheel or the distance the wheel would roll (without slipping) if free to do so. • In such cases, v and aT refer to the tangential speed and acceleration of a point on the belt or of the center of the wheel.

  13. Uniform Circular Motion An object moving in a circle with constant speed, v, experiences a centripetal acceleration with: *a magnitude that is constant in time and is equal to *a direction that changes continuously in time and always points toward the center of the circular path For uniform circular motion, the velocity is tangential to the circle and perpendicular to the acceleration

  14. r Period and Frequency A circular motion is described in terms of the period T, which is the time for an object to complete one revolution. The distance traveled in one revolution is The frequency, f, counts the number of revolutions per unit time.

  15. Example of Uniform Circular Motion The moon’s nearly circular orbit about the earth has a radius of about 384,000 km and a period T of 27.3 days. Determine the acceleration of the Moon towards the Earth.

  16. Uniform Circular Motion Newton’s 2nd Law: The net force on a body is equal to the product of the mass of the body and the acceleration of the body. *The centripetal accelerationis caused by a centripetal force that is directed towards the center of the circle.

  17. ROTATIONAL INERTIA • Law of inertia for rotating systems An object rotating about an axis tends to remain rotating at the same rate about the same axis unless interfered with by some external influence. • Examples: bullet, arrow, and earth • Demo – Football and spinning basketball • Demo - Whirly Tube (Zinger) • Demo – Whirly Shooter • Demo - Disc Gun • Demo - Rubber Bands

  18. Demo - Inertia Bars • Moment of inertia (rotational inertia) The sluggishness of an object to changes in its state of rotational motion • Distribution of mass is the key. • Example: Tightrope walker

  19. CENTRIPETAL ACCELERATION • Centripetal acceleration (ac): • A point mass m moving with constant speed v around a circle of radius r is undergoing acceleration. • The direction of the velocity is continually changing. • This gives rise to an acceleration ac of the mass, directed toward the center of the circle. • We call this acceleration the centripetal acceleration; its magnitude is given by

  20. Because v = rw, we also have where w must be in rad/s.

  21. THE CENTRIPETAL FORCE The centripetal force (Fc) is the force that must act on a mass m moving in a circular path of radius r to give it the centripetal acceleration v2/r. From F = ma, we have Where Fc is directed toward the center of the circular path.

  22. CENTRIPETALFORCE • Centripetal force - center seeking force • Examples: tin can and string, sling, moon and earth, car on circular path • Demo - Coin on clothes hanger • Demo - String, ball, and tube • Demo - Loop the loop

  23. CENTRIFUGAL FORCE • Centrifugal force - center fleeing force • Often confused with centripetal • Examples: sling and bug in can • Demo - Walk the Line • Centrifugal force is attributed to inertia.

  24. CENTRIFUGAL FORCE IN A ROTATING REFERENCE FRAME • A frame of reference can influence our view of nature. • For example: we observe a centrifugal force in a rotating frame of reference, yet it is a fictitious (pseudo) force. • Centrifugal force stands alone (there is no action-reaction pair) - it is a fictitious force.

  25. Another pseudo force - Coriolis

  26. THANK YOU

More Related