a car with a mass of 1200 kg is moving around a circular curve at a uniform velocity of 20 meters per second. the centripetal force on the car is 6000 newtons. what is the radius of the curve?

Respuesta :

AL2006

Well, first of all, the car is not moving with a uniform velocity. 
It's on a part of a circle, so the direction of its motion is constantly
changing.  Its speed may be constant, but its velocity is constantly
changing, because direction is a big part of velocity.

OK.  So its mass is 1200 kg, its speed is 20 m/s, and 6000N of
centripetal force is enough to keep it on a circular path.

The centripetal force on an object moving in a circle is

                                         F      =  (mass) x (speed)² / (radius)

                                  6,000 N  =  (1,200 kg) x (20 m/s)² / (radius)

Multiply each side
by (radius):             (6000 N) x (radius) = 24000 kg-m²/s²

Divide each side
 by (6000 N):                      radius  = (24,000 kg-m²/s²) / (6000 N)

                                                    = (24,000 kg-m²/s²) / (6000 kg-m/s²)

                                                    =    4 meters .

In the real world, this is an absurd situation.  But I think
my Physics and my Math here are OK.

It just says that if you were in a car that weighs 2,645 pounds,
and you were cruising along at 45 miles per hour, then if you
could somehow arrange for a centripetal force of 1,350 pounds,
it would be enough centripetal force to keep your car on a circular
track that's only 26 feet across !


F = m v^2 / r

r = m v^2 / F

r = 1200 * 400 / 6000 = 120 * 4 / 6 = 20 * 4 = 80

Units are left as an excersise.