Circular Motion Basics

  • When an object moves in a circle with uniform speed, it experiences centripetal acceleration directed toward the center:

    \(\boxed{a_c = \frac{v^2}{R}}\)
  • The force causing this acceleration is the centripetal force:

    \(\boxed{f_c = \frac{mv^2}{R}}\)
    Examples: Tension in a string (for a rotating stone), gravitational force (for planets), or friction (for cars on roads).

Car on a Level Road

  • Three forces act: weight (\(mg\)), normal force (\(N\)), and friction (\(f\)). Friction provides the centripetal force.
  • Maximum speed without slipping:

    \(\boxed{v_{\text{max}} = \sqrt{\mu_s R g}\)
    Facts: Speed limit depends on friction coefficient (\(\mu_s\)), radius (\(R\)), and gravity (\(g\)). Mass doesn’t matter!

Car on a Banked Road

  • Banking reduces reliance on friction. Forces involved: normal force (\(N\)), friction (\(f\)), and weight (\(mg\)).
  • Optimum speed (no friction needed):

    \(\boxed{v_o = \sqrt{R g \tan \theta}}\)
  • Maximum permissible speed (with friction):

    \(\boxed{v_{\text{max}} = \sqrt{ Rg \frac{\mu_s + \tan \theta}{1 – \mu_s \tan \theta} }}\)

Examples

  • Cyclist on a level road: If \(v^2 > \mu_s R g\), the cyclist slips. For \(v = 5 \, \text{m/s}\), \(R = 3 \, \text{m}\), \(\mu_s = 0.1\): \(25 > 2.94\) → cyclist slips.
  • Banked racetrack: At \(\theta = 15°\), \(\mu_s = 0.2\), \(R = 300 \, \text{m}\):
    – Optimum speed: \(28.1 \, \text{m/s}\)
    – Max speed: \(38.1 \, \text{m/s}\)

Important Concepts for NEET

  1. Centripetal Force Sources: Identify forces like tension, gravity, or friction acting as centripetal force in different scenarios.
  2. Maximum Speed on Flat Road: \(v_{\text{max}} = \sqrt{\mu_s R g}\) is a frequently tested formula.
  3. Banked Roads: Know how to calculate \(v_o\) (no friction) and \(v_{\text{max}}\) (with friction).
  4. Friction’s Role: Static friction provides centripetal force on flat roads; banking reduces this dependence.