Difference between revisions of "Forest UCM NLM Oscilations"

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=== The phi-hat direction===
 
=== The phi-hat direction===
  
:-mg \sin \theta = mR ddot \phit
+
:<math>-mg \sin \theta = mR ddot \phi</math>
 +
: <math>\ddot \phi = - \frac{g}{R} \sin \theta</math>
  
 
[[Forest_UCM_NLM#Oscillatiions]]
 
[[Forest_UCM_NLM#Oscillatiions]]

Revision as of 12:18, 31 August 2014

Skate boarder in Half pipe

Consider a frictionless skateboard released from the top of a semi-circle (half pipe) and oriented to fall directly towards the bottom. The semi-circle has a radius [math]R[/math] and the skateboard has a mass [math]m[/math].

Note: because the skateboard is frictionless, its wheels are not going to turn.

Step 1: System

The skateboard of mass [math]m[/math] is the system.

Step 1: Coordinate system

Polar coordinate may be a good coordinate system to use since the skateboard's motion will be along the half circle.

300 px

Step 3: Free Body Diagram

Step 4: External Force vectors

[math]\vec{F}_g = -mg \cos \theta \hat{r} - mg \sin \theta \hat{\phi}[/math]
[math]\vec{N} = N \hat{r}[/math]

Step 5: apply Netwon's 2nd Law

[math]\sum \vec{F}_{ext} = \vec{F}_g + \vec{N} = m \left ( \ddot{r} -r\dot{\phi}^2 \right) \hat{r} + \left ( 2\dot{r} \dot{\phi} +r \ddot{\phi} \right ) \hat{\phi}[/math]

For the case of circular motion at constant [math] r=R, \dot{r} = 0[/math]

[math]\vec{F}_g + \vec{N} = m \left ( -R\dot{\phi}^2 \hat{r} + R \ddot{\phi} \hat{\phi} \right ) [/math]

The r-hat direction

[math]mg \cos \theta - N = -m R\dot{\phi}^2[/math]
[math]N = m \left ( g \cos \theta + R\dot{\phi}^2 \right )[/math]
[math]N = mg \cos \theta + ma_c[/math]
[math]a_c = \frac{v^2}{R} = R\dot{\phi}^2 =[/math] centripetal acceleration

The phi-hat direction

[math]-mg \sin \theta = mR ddot \phi[/math]
[math]\ddot \phi = - \frac{g}{R} \sin \theta[/math]

Forest_UCM_NLM#Oscillatiions