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I consider this question and the answer of the user @Bob D in this link: Centripetal and Centrifugal acceleration/force. When an athlete runs round a curve in the atletic track he will be subject to centripetal acceleration and centrifugal acceleration, and I also believe that the motion will be circular and non-uniform.

I know that,

$$\mathbf{a}_{\text{cp}}=\frac{v^2}r, \quad \mathbf{a}_{\text{tan}}=\alpha r$$ where $\alpha$ it is the angular acceleration. Easily the total acceleration is:

$${a}=\sqrt{a^2_{\text{cp}}+a^2_{\text{tan}}}$$

Why (with the formulas) the centrifugal acceleration must coincide exactly with centripetal acceleration? Isn't centrifugal acceleration a tangential acceleration hence $\mathbf{a}_{\text{tan}}=\alpha r$?

Addendum: I add any image for clarifications by the comments.

enter image description here

Comment for the picture: An observer on a rotating platform rotation feels a force that pushes it outward and, to remain stationary, it must exploit the friction with the floor. Since the weight force and the normal reaction of the floor cancel each other out, the only real force on the observer is the static friction force $\mathbf{f}_s$, which acts as centripetal force. We must then suppose that in the reference system of the platform another force appears, the centrifugal force $\mathbf{F}_{\text{cf}}$, which has the same intensity and the same direction as the centripetal centripetal force, but opposite direction.

enter image description here

Sebastiano
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    When an athlete runs round a curve in the atletic track he will be subject to centripetal acceleration and centrifugal acceleration... You are viewing this from a rotating reference frame? – BioPhysicist Mar 20 '21 at 21:53
  • @BioPhysicist Hi.Truly no :-( peraphs simply because I don't imagine the drawing and at this moment I not image how it is made the rotating reference frame. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 22:03
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    In the inertial frame (the non-rotating frame) there is no centrifugal acceleration. – Steeven Mar 20 '21 at 22:07
  • @Steeven Yes of course the velocity in the inertial frame it is constant. To my students I have told that tangential or lateral acceleration is zero. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 22:34
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    Sebastiano Not sure I understand... In your reply to @BioPhysicist you state that you are not viewing this from a rotational frame. But then no centrifugal acceleration should be included. – Steeven Mar 20 '21 at 22:49
  • @Steeven If I stand in a rotational reference system and throw a ball to an opponent, the trajectory is straight. I hope I've thought it through correctly now. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 22:52
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    Sebastiano No, the trajectory is not straight from the rotational frame. It is only straight from the inertial frame. In the rotational frame, if you throw a ball it will look as though a centrifugal force pushes it sideways which causes the trajectory to appear curving. – Steeven Mar 21 '21 at 07:40
  • @Steeven Very kind Steeven I have added two images and an explanation of my Italian textbook. I think that is the same concept that you have written. I hope....THANK YOU VERY MUCH. – Sebastiano Mar 21 '21 at 11:15

3 Answers3

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Why (with the formulas) the centrifugal acceleration must coincide exactly with centripetal acceleration?

In an inertial frame, the centripetal force is simply the component of the net force directed to the center of rotation.

Consider the classic string with a mass attached at the end. Assume no gravity, such that the only force acting on the mass is the tension $T$. Now if the mass is to undergo circular motion in a perfect circle of fixed radius $r$, you know that the net force directed inwards (i.e. centripetal force) is $$F_C = \dfrac{mv^2}r$$

Now imagine this object rotating and you cut the string. I made an animation here: https://www.desmos.com/calculator/s8roerbvub. At first, the object is flying radially outwards. This is simply due to the object's inertia -- it continues moving with its given velocity.

Imagine you're in a car. You take a sharp left. Approximate the turn as perfectly circular. Even though you end up turning left, your body feels as though it "wants" to go right, outwards. After all, if you're leaned against the door, you will feel the door exert a force on you. The force would be the normal force, providing the necessary centripetal force to keep going in that circle (also friction, but we can ignore that for this purpose). The conclusion is that $F_C = N$

Now, let's pick a non inertial frame of reference where you're not accelerating. That would be right inside your car. Since you're not accelerating, the net force must be zero. But the door is pushing on you with some force $N$ to the left. But you're not accelerating in that frame, therefore there must be some other force to balance it out, pushing you to the right. That "other force" is the fictitious centrifugal force. By Newton's second law, you get that $F_{fictitious} = N$, but you know that $N=F_C$, which means your fictitious centrifugal force is equal in magnitude (but opposite in direction) to the centripetal force. Same goes for acceleration.

user256872
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  • Excellent the animation with Desmos that I use for my students. When t = 6.28 s, watch what happens when the center-seeking force stops acting I see that the black ball moves in the straight line: so the tangential, or lateral or centrifugal, acceleration is zero. Hence there is only the the centripetal acceleration. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 22:39
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    @Sebastiano at 6.28 s, when the string is cut, the black ball no longer accelerates. that's just to show that when undergoing circular motion in an inertial frame, the centripetal force is necessary to prevent the object from going outwards due to its inertia (as shown when the string is "cut"). in a non inertial frame, the centrifugal force is the one pulling the ball outwards, which is equal in magnitude to the centripetal force. – user256872 Mar 20 '21 at 23:01
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    Note that the centrifugal force does not need to be equal to the centripetal force, as the former depends on the frame of reference, but the latter does not. – BioPhysicist Mar 21 '21 at 01:26
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Another way to look at it is thinking of the centrifugal force as a real force, but acting on the ground, not on the runner. It is part of the horizontal component of the force that the runner does on the track. The ground reacts with a centripetal force on the runner, since there is enough friction between shoes and track.

The other horizontal part is the tangential force. For the foot behind the body, that force on the ground is backward and the reaction of the ground accelerates the runner. For the foot ahead the body, the force on the ground is forward, and its reaction decelerates the athlete. So it can make the curve keeping the modulus of velocity constant.

  • +1 also for you. Please, can you put a drawing? It help my mind. I can suggest to use https://www.mathcha.io/editor. Thank you again. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 23:10
  • Thanks for the link. It seems a useful tool. – Claudio Saspinski Mar 20 '21 at 23:22
  • If you have need of an help I am a disposition :-)....I use often in TeX.SE. for the newbie of LaTeX when they have not a minimal working example. – Sebastiano Mar 20 '21 at 23:28
  • Note that you are talking about the reactive centrifugal force, which is different than the pseudo-force centrifugal force we usually talk about. – BioPhysicist Mar 21 '21 at 01:25
  • @BioPhysicist In the examples of the link, the name reactive is appropriated. But where the centripetal force comes from friction as here, it seems odd to call the force of the runner on the track as a reaction to the friction force. The opposite is more logical. – Claudio Saspinski Mar 21 '21 at 12:43
  • @ClaudioSaspinski I'm not sure I'm following what you are saying. If friction is acting on the runner then it is also acting on the track. That forms the action-reaction pair. In any case the point I was trying to make is that the "centrifugal force" you are talking about here is not the same thing as the centrifugal force arising from a non-inertial frame that the OP seems to be concerned about. Those are two different things. – BioPhysicist Mar 21 '21 at 13:24
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If you are viewing the system from an inertial (non-accelerating) frame of reference, then there is no centrifugal force. The centrifugal force has nothing to do with the motion of the system and everything to do with the reference frame. If you are viewing the system from a rotating reference frame, then you will have to conclude one of two things (not both):

  1. Newton's second law is broken: accelerations are being affected by something other than a force
  2. Newtons third law is broken: forces are present that do not arise from interactions.

The centrifugal force is the result of the latter option: it is a pseudo-force that has no "equal but opposite reaction".

Furthermore, contrary to other answers, it need not be equal to the centripetal force. For starters, there doesn't even need to be a centripetal force to have a centrifugal force because, as I said before, the centrifugal force only depends on the frame of reference. But even in the case of uniform circular motion, the centrifugal force only equals the centripetal force in the case where the frame rotates with the object undergoing circular motion.

And finally, the tangential component of the force is not the centrifugal force; it is a real component just like the centripetal force is.

BioPhysicist
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