BackPhysics 1A: Circular Motion, Relative Motion, and Rocket Dynamics – Study Notes
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Circular Motion in a Vertical Circle
Speed at Different Points in a Vertical Circle
When a particle moves in a vertical circle under the influence of gravity, its speed varies depending on its position due to the conservation of mechanical energy. The work-energy theorem provides a kinematic invariant for such motion.
Kinematic Invariant: The quantity remains constant for a particle of mass m moving in a vertical circle of radius R under gravity g, where is the angle from the vertical downward axis.
At the Top (Point A, ):
At the Bottom (Point B, ):
Equating values at top and bottom:
Example: If , , , then .
Radial (Centripetal) Acceleration
The radial acceleration at any point in the circle is given by .
At the Top (): (direction: downward, toward center)
At the Bottom (): (direction: upward, toward center)
Normal Force and Radial Dynamics
Applying Newton's Second Law in the radial direction allows us to analyze the forces acting on the particle at any angle .
Forces: Normal force (inward), radial component of gravity (outward or inward depending on ).
Newton's Second Law (radial):
Normal force acceleration:
At the Top ():
At the Bottom ():
Difference in normal force acceleration between bottom and top:
Minimum Speed to Maintain Contact
The particle (or car) will lose contact with the track if the normal force becomes zero or negative. The critical point is at the top of the circle.
Condition for contact at the top:
Setting :
Example: For , , .
Relative Motion in River Crossing
River Width and Current Speed
When a boat crosses a river with a current, the effective velocity relative to the bank is the vector sum of the boat's velocity relative to the water and the current's velocity.
Definitions:
: Boat speed relative to water
: Speed of current
: Boat speed relative to bank
: Width of river
Effective crossing speed (perpendicular crossing):
Width equation:
Given two trips with different and , but same :
Example Calculation: For , , , :
Shortest Time to Cross and Downstream Drift
Shortest crossing time occurs when the boat heads directly perpendicular to the bank:
Drift downstream:
Example: ,
Rocket Soft Landing Dynamics
Forces and Acceleration During Landing
To achieve a soft landing, a rocket must apply an upward thrust to decelerate from its initial downward velocity to rest at ground level.
Given: Initial speed (downward), initial height , mass , final velocity at .
Newton's Second Law (vertical):
Acceleration is constant since both and are constant.
Kinematic Analysis for Required Acceleration
Velocity condition at landing:
Position condition at landing:
Solving for :
From velocity:
Substitute into position:
Simplifies to:
Alternative (time-independent) method:
For , , :
Calculating Required Thrust
Substitute into force equation:
Numerical example:
Summary Table: Key Equations and Results
Topic | Key Equation | Result/Condition |
|---|---|---|
Vertical Circle Speed (Bottom) | Speed at bottom given speed at top | |
Radial Acceleration (Bottom) | Radial acceleration at bottom | |
Minimum Speed at Top | Minimum speed to maintain contact | |
River Current Speed | Solving for current speed | |
Shortest Crossing Time | Boat heads perpendicular to bank | |
Rocket Thrust for Soft Landing | Constant thrust required |
Additional info: Academic context and step-by-step derivations have been added for clarity and completeness. All equations are provided in LaTeX format as per instructions.