practice
- Write something.
- Ringworld is the title of a classic science fiction novel written by Larry Niven in
1970. Set in the year 2850, it is the story of four adventurers (two human
and two alien) who are chosen to explore an engineered world encircling a
sun-like star. The Ringworld is an enormous cylindrical band with a radius
roughly equal to that of the earth's orbit and a width about the same as
the diameter of the sun. It was constructed by some unspecified form of matter
transmutation using the planets and minor bodies that once orbited the Ringworld's
sun as raw material. The flat, inner surface is covered with a natural-looking,
earth-like terrain and it spins at a speed fast enough to provide its inhabitants
with the sensation of earth-like gravity. Thousand mile high walls along
the edges keep the Ringworld's atmosphere from spilling out into space. The
Ringworld is the home of hundreds of hominid species, but they are mostly
non-technological. The sufficiently advanced civilization that engineered
the Ringworld collapsed centuries ago and the adventurers find only its remains.
How fast does Ringworld spin to provide its inhabitants with the sensation
of normal earth gravity? State your answer in …
- meters per second
- earth days per rotation
- rotations per earth year
- The following passage outlines the design specifications of a proposed maglev train system (the Transrapid).
Frage/Question: What is the Transrapid's curve radius?
Antwort/Answer: The curve radii of modern high-speed systems result in
dependence on the speed and the maximum possible superelevation of the
guideway to compensate for the centrifugal forces occurring. The Transrapid's
guideway can have a maximum superelevation of 12 degree (up to 16 degree
in special cases) which allows smaller radii at higher speeds than in
the case of conventional wheel-on-rail systems.
- Minimal radius: 350 m
- 200 km/h: 705 m
- 400 km/h: 2,825 m
- 500 km/h: 4,415 m
Determine …
- the maximum centripetal acceleration (in m/s2 and g) implied
by these specifications
- the speed limit (in m/s and km/h) on a curved section of track with
the minimal radius
- Write something completely different.
conceptual
- trajectories-circular.pdf
The drawings on the accompanying pdf show a mass on the end of a string as it
is spun counterclockwise in a vertical circle. A pair of scissors is used to
cut the string cleanly and instantly at four different positions. Sketch the
subsequent trajectory of the mass until it lands on the ground.
- Which device(s) on a car can be used to control its speed? Which device(s) on
a car can be used to control its velocity but not its speed?
- A car driving on a circular test track shows a constant speedometer reading of
200 km/h for one lap.
- Describe the car's speed during this time.
- Describe its velocity.
- How do the two compare?
- In an unusual move by the New York Department of Transportation, all of the
"speed limit" signs in the state were replaced with "velocity limit" signs.
- What would such a sign look like?
- How could one travel faster than the old speed limit without violating the new velocity limit?
- Draw a free-body diagram for each of the following situations …
- A car turning a corner on level ground.
- A model airplane on the end of a string, flying in a horizontal circle.
- A roller coaster at the top of a vertical loop. (The roller coaster is
upside-down.)
- A car rounding a banked curve.
- A pendulum released from a 60° angle at three points in its motion …
- immediately after it's been released,
- halfway to the bottom, and
- at the lowest point.
numerical
- A 500 kg race car rounds a curve with a radius of 100 m.
- What type of force is the centripetal force in this example?
- Find the magnitude of the centripetal force acting on the car when it rounds
the curve at 20 m/s.
- Find the magnitude of the centripetal force acting on the car when it rounds
the curve at 60 m/s.
- How does the centripetal force at 60 m/s compare to the centripetal
force at 20 m/s?
- Some people rejected the notion that the earth is rotating when it was first
proposed. Since the earth is so large, points on the equator would be moving
quite fast and it was thought that objects on the equator would be flung off
into space. Show that the acceleration due to gravity is more than sufficient
to keep this from happening through the following calculations.
- Find the speed of a point on the equator.
- How does this speed compare to the speed of sound in air?
- Find the centripetal acceleration needed to remain on the equator.
- How does the acceleration provided by gravity compare to the centripetal
acceleration?
- A cylindrical space station of diameter 500 m is set spinning to provide
the sensation of normal earth gravity. Determine …
- the speed of a point on the floor of the space station,
- the period of one complete revolution, and
- the number of revolutions per minute.
- In 1959, R. Flanagan Gray, a physician at the Aviation Medical Acceleration Laboratory
in Johnsville Pennsylvania, subjected himself to 31.25 g of transverse acceleration
for five seconds. This performance, in a water-filled aluminum capsule incorrectly
nicknamed the "Iron Maiden", established a new record for centrifugal
acceleration tolerance. Given that the capsule was positioned 15 m (50 feet)
from the center of rotation, determine …
- the speed of the capsule,
- the period of rotation, and
- the number of rotations during the five seconds of peak acceleration.
- A stunt motorcycle track has a section which is a vertical loop of radius
5.0 m. At what minimum speed should a motorcycle be driven through …
- the top of the loop?
- the bottom of the loop?
- A 0.10 kg solid rubber ball is attached to the end of an 0.80 m
length of light thread. The ball is swung in a vertical circle. The speed of
the ball is kept constant at 6.0 m/s throughout this experiment. Determine
the tension in the thread at …
- the top of the circle and
- the bottom of the circle.
- Geosynchronous, Earth-Orbiting Space Station
For a sufficiently advanced human civilization, the occasional trip into outer
space may become a reality for the general population. Having large numbers of
spacecraft landing and taking off from the surface of the earth would probably
not be acceptable, however. One way around this would be to build a ring around
the earth that rotates at the same rate as the earth. This ring would be linked
to the equator by electrically powered space elevators. No more noisy, dirty
rockets. Just hop on the space elevator, press the "up" button, and
stare nonchalantly at the door for a couple of hours. Such a massive structure
would also house a large population of full-time inhabitants. Since they're the
descendants of earth-bound humans, they would probably feel most comfortable
in a 1 g environment. Determine the radius of such a megastructure. State
your answer in terms of
- multiples of earth's radius.
- the fraction of the distance from the earth to the moon.
(For now, we will assume the acceleration due to gravity
at this distance is negligible. We will not make this assumption once the topic
of gravity has been presented in this book.)
- Tethered spacecraft.
Text
algebraic
- A rock of mass m is tied to a string and spun
in a vertical circle of radius r at a constant
speed. At the top of the circle, the tension in the string is
twice the weight of the rock. Determine the following quantities in
terms of g, r,
and m …
- the tension in the string at the top of the circle
- the speed of the rock at the top of the circle
- the speed of the rock at the bottom of the circle
- the tension in the string at the bottom of the circle
- As a highway engineer, you wish to design a safe curve for a highway with a speed
limit v of 24 m/s (54 mph). Rubber tire on dry
pavement has a coefficient of static friction μs of
0.75.
- What is the relation between the radius r of a turn
and the known quantities in this problem for a car that is not skidding out
of control? That is, state r as a function of v, μs,
and g. (Note: a variety of vehicles with different masses
will be traveling on this highway. Somehow you must eliminate mass from your
equation.)
- Given the numbers in this problem, determine the radius of a curve that
is just safe enough to allow a car traveling at the speed limit to safely
round the corner.
- Engineers often "over design" their projects to reduce the probability
of failure. For example, bridges are built many times stronger than is necessary
to just support the weight of traffic. Name at least two things that should
be done to ensure that this highway curve is over designed.
worksheets
- These problems are also available on the worksheet circular-motion.pdf.
- The Physics Teacher has published several
articles containing free body diagram worksheets. They
are available free to members of the American Association
of Physics Teachers (AAPT). Everyone else has to pay.
- Free-body
diagrams revisited — I. James E. Court. The Physics Teacher.
Vol. 37, No. 7 (October 1999): 427-433. Note: pages
432-433 are relevant to this topic.
- Free-body
diagrams. James E. Court. The Physics Teacher. Vol. 31,
No. 2 (February 1993): 104-108. Note: Questions 20-24 are
relevant to this topic.