An object is
said to be moving in uniform circular motion when it maintains a constant
speed while traveling in a circle. Remember that since acceleration is a vector
quantity comprised of both magnitude and direction, objects can
accelerate in any of these three ways:
1. constant direction, changing speed (linear acceleration);
2. constant speed, changing
direction (centripetal acceleration);
3. change in both speed and
direction (angular acceleration).
In this lesson,
we will be investigating centripetal acceleration and uniform circular
motion - that is, objects moving in circular paths at constant speeds.
While moving in
a circular path, an object is constantly being pulled "towards the
center" of the circle away from its tangential path. Envision a
stopper on the end of a string being twirled over your head in a
horizontal circle. If the string were to break, the stopper would
"fly off at a tangent." The tension in the string is
forcing the stopper to constantly be pulled back towards the center to
follow a circular, instead of a linear, path.
As shown in the
diagram above, in a certain amount of time, Δt, an object traveling in a
circular path would move from position A at time t1 where
its velocity is labeled vo to position B at time t2 where
its velocity is labeled vf. Note that the magnitude of vf equals
that of vo since we are only changing the direction of
the velocity, not the object's speed.
Remember that
acceleration equals Δv/Δt. To diagram this acceleration, we must be able
to diagram the resultant change in velocity, or Δv. Thus we must
recognize the orientation of the vector -vo. Since the
vector vo points to the right, the vector -vo would
have the exact same magnitude but point in the opposite direction.
The direction of
the acceleration that an object experiences during an interval of time,
Δt, is illustrated in the next diagram by showing the direction of vf -
vo. To diagram the vector resultant vf -
vo, we will use the head-to-tail method of vector addition
where
Δv = vf - vo = vf +
(- vo)
Notice that the
resultant velocity, Δv, starts at the beginning of the vector vf and
terminates at the end of the vector -vo.
This relation
can also be seen in the following diagram when we merely rearranged the
vector equation Δv = vf - vo to
read vo + Δv = vf .
Notice that vf
is now the resultant vector since vf starts at the
beginning of the vector vo and terminates at the end of
the vector Δv.
Note that in
both cases, Δv points to the center of the circle reflecting that the
acceleration is also directed towards the center of the circle.
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