TransWikia.com

Does the centripetal force $= mg - R$?

Physics Asked on January 31, 2021

Please tell me if I’m wrong with an explanation (A Level explanation please).

You feel the heaviest at the bottom of the ferris wheel because in order for there to be a centripetal force, the normal force has to increase to provide the force. Therefore, your weight decreases because Newton Third’s Law states that the two pairs of forces are opposite and equal. (But I didn’t think it was possible to decrease your weight and so I think I am wrong).
You feel the lightest or weightless at the top of the ferris wheel because the centripetal force required is opposite to the normal force, thus the normal force needs to decrease in order to provide a force for the inward acceleration. As the normal force decreases, your weight must therefore also decrease and therefore you feel weightless.

I have a feeling this is wrong because you can’t physically change your weight on Earth (unless you exercise) and so can someone provide me with some explanation as to why you feel weightless.

Oh, and does the centripetal force $= mg – R $?

Edit: I now understand that weight and the normal reaction force are not an interaction pair so Newton’s Third Law does not apply.

So, does this mean that the circular motion is due to the normal reaction force only increasing?

3 Answers

Many people confound mass and weight. Your mass is always the same, but the force on the mass by the gravity of the earth is even smaller at the poles than at the equator. In the bottom of the ferrywheel the force on your mass comes from the gravity, and a second force the centrifugal force in the same direction, so you feel heavier, on top of the wheel the weight you feel standing on the earth is diminished be the centrifugal force, with the right speed you can feel weightless, but your weight, the gravitational force ist the same, but the centrifugal force against this weight ensures , that you don't feel your "weight". The centrifugal force is m*v^2/R so it is not proportional to R.

Answered by trula on January 31, 2021

Your body constituents is what gives your body 'mass'. But the weight you feel is not a direct result of your mass itself. Since you understand what normal force is, you should be able to understand that when you stand on the ground, the earth pulls you down with a force equal to 'm times g', which is your weight; but the reason you 'feel' this weight is because the ground is there between you and the centre of the earth. Therefore, you exert a force of 'm times g' on the ground, and by Newton's Third Law, the ground exerts an equal and opposite normal force on your feet; that pressure is what makes you feel weight all over your body.

So the feeling of weight, or weightlessness depends on the normal force exerted on you by whatever surface you happen to be standing on, not your mass(of course your mass directly affects it, but not what causes it). Like you have mentioned, the normal force at the bottom of the Ferris wheel is highest, and lowest at the top. Relating to the above reasoning, you can figure out why you feel heavy at the bottom and light at the top. Centripetal force is 'mass times centripetal acceleration'=$mv^2/R$

Answered by Reet Jaiswal on January 31, 2021

Centrifugal force acts radially outwards on a Ferris wheel, gravity only pulls downward. Therefor centrifugal force is subtracted from gravity at the top, making you feel lighter, and added to gravity at the bottom, making you feel heavier.

Answered by Adrian Howard on January 31, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP