Linear acceleration on a rotating body

In summary, tangential acceleration changes the magnitude of linear velocity and radial acceleration changes the direction of linear velocity for a point on a rotating body. Tangential force applied to the edge of the body causes it to rotate, while the force needed to hold the body together and maintain its rotation points towards the center.
  • #1
spaghetti3451
1,344
33
What is the difference between tangential and radial acceleration for a point on a rotating body? As far as I know, the tangential acceleration changes the magnitude of the linear velocity of the point and the radial acceleration changes the direction of its linear velocity. But I don't understand why. And why do they have to point in the directions they do?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
If you push a body with a force that acts directly through the center of mass, the body just accelerates in a line and does not turn. You can try this stuff out on a table-top.

If you push it off-axis though, it will rotate as well as move off in a line.
The line it moves off is the one through the point the force is applied and the center of mass. The component of the force perpendicular to this rotates it.

So far so good.

To get the object to be rotating but not translating, you have to apply the force tangentially. That makes sense - you end up pushing the edge in a circle so it is no surprise to find it rotating. If you keep pushing, the rotation gets faster and faster which is also no surprise - you are pushing in a circle. It is only at an instant of time that we say your force is tangential.

Stop pushing, however, and (if nothing else happens) the body keeps spinning. This is just the law of inertia in action. Thing is, the bits of the body don't want to go in a circle, they want to go in a line. The reason they don't is because the bits of the body are all stuck to the other bits of the body.

The force needed to hold the bits together has to be big enough to change the direction that the bits are trying to go in. That force has to point to the center - because that is the direction of the change in velocity of all the bits.

And a = F/m.
 

Related to Linear acceleration on a rotating body

What is linear acceleration on a rotating body?

Linear acceleration on a rotating body refers to the rate of change of velocity in a straight line along the surface of a rotating object. It is a result of both the rotational speed and the radius of the object.

How is linear acceleration on a rotating body calculated?

The formula for linear acceleration on a rotating body is a = ω²r, where a is the linear acceleration, ω is the angular velocity, and r is the radius of the object. This formula is derived from the equation a = v²/r, where v is the tangential velocity.

What is the relationship between linear acceleration and tangential acceleration on a rotating body?

Tangential acceleration is the linear acceleration that occurs tangential to the circular path of a rotating object. This means that tangential acceleration is a component of linear acceleration on a rotating body, and it is calculated using the formula a = αr, where α is the angular acceleration.

How does the direction of linear acceleration change on a rotating body?

The direction of linear acceleration on a rotating body is constantly changing, as the object is constantly changing direction due to its rotation. This means that the acceleration vector is constantly changing direction and is always perpendicular to the tangential velocity vector.

What is the significance of linear acceleration on a rotating body?

Linear acceleration on a rotating body is an important concept in understanding rotational motion and how objects move in circular paths. It is also important in many engineering and scientific applications, such as designing and analyzing rotating machinery and vehicles.

Similar threads

Replies
14
Views
347
Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
21
Views
7K
  • Mechanics
Replies
3
Views
146
Replies
2
Views
803
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
9
Views
1K
  • Mechanics
Replies
6
Views
933
Back
Top