Circular Motion and Gravity
Subject: Physics
Topic: 4
Cambridge Code: 0625
Circular Motion Fundamentals
Angular Displacement
Angular displacement (θ) - Angle swept in radians
Where:
- s = arc length
- r = radius
- 1 radian = 57.3°
- 2π radians = 360°
Angular Velocity
Angular velocity (ω) - Rate of angular change
Where:
- T = period (time for one revolution)
- Unit: rad/s
Relationship to linear velocity:
Centripetal Acceleration
Centripetal acceleration - Acceleration toward center
Key points:
- Always toward center
- Magnitude constant (uniform circular motion)
- Direction continuously changes
Centripetal Force
Force providing centripetal acceleration:
Where:
- m = mass
- v = speed
- r = radius
Source of centripetal force varies:
- String tension (horizontal)
- Normal force (vertical)
- Friction
- Gravity
Circular Motion Examples
Horizontal Circle (String)
Tension provides centripetal force:
If tension increases:
- Speed increases or radius decreases
- Or string may break
Vertical Circle
At top of circle:
- Weight and tension both toward center
- Minimum speed to maintain contact: T = 0
- →
At bottom of circle:
- Normal force away from center
- Normal force larger than weight
Period and Frequency
Period (T) - Time for one revolution
- Unit: seconds
Frequency (f) - Revolutions per second
- Unit: Hertz (Hz)
Relationship:
Gravitational Field
Gravitational field - Region where gravity acts
Field strength (g) - Force per unit mass
Where:
- G = gravitational constant = 6.67 × 10⁻¹¹ N·m²/kg²
- M = mass creating field
- r = distance from mass
- Unit: N/kg or m/s²
On Earth
Increases with depth initially, decreases with altitude
Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation
Where:
- F = gravitational force
- m₁, m₂ = masses
- r = separation
- G = 6.67 × 10⁻¹¹ N·m²/kg²
Properties:
- Always attractive
- Acts between any two masses
- Decreases with distance squared
- Independent of medium
Orbital Motion
Satellite Orbits
For circular orbit, gravity provides centripetal force:
Orbital velocity:
- Decreases with altitude (larger r)
- Independent of satellite mass
- Faster orbits are lower
Escape Velocity
Minimum velocity to escape gravitational field:
(At planet surface: )
Orbital Period
From cirular orbit condition:
Kepler's Third Law:
Geostationary Orbits
Geostationary satellite:
- Period = 24 hours (Earth's rotation period)
- Remains above same point on Earth
- Used for communications
Orbital radius:
Simple Harmonic Motion Basics
SHM - Motion with restoring force ∝ displacement
Displacement:
Where:
- A = amplitude
- ω = angular frequency
- φ = phase constant
- t = time
Energy in SHM
Total energy constant:
Maximum KE: At equilibrium (v maximum) Maximum PE: At maximum displacement
Key Points
- Centripetal force always toward center
- Centripetal acceleration = v²/r
- Angular velocity: ω = 2π/T
- Gravitational force ∝ 1/r²
- Orbital velocity independent of mass
- Escape velocity = √(2gR)
- Period T² ∝ r³ (Kepler's law)
- Geostationary orbit: T = 24 hours
- Circular motion requires net inward force
- SHM: a = -ω²x
Practice Questions
- Calculate centripetal force
- Find orbital velocity
- Determine escape velocity
- Apply Newton's gravitation law
- Analyze vertical circular motion
- Calculate periods and frequencies
- Determine orbital altitudes
- Analyze gravitational fields
- Solve SHM problems
- Complex orbital mechanics
Revision Tips
- Understand centripetal direction always toward center
- Apply F = mv²/r correctly
- Know gravitational force law
- Practice orbital problems
- Understand field concept
- Remember Kepler's laws
- Distinguish escape vs orbital velocity
- Visualize circular motion
- Use energy conservation for orbits