I was remembering back into when I first learned physics I (kinematics) and I remembered a problem that at first gave me some trouble.
A car on a race track has a turn that is a perfectly circular pi radian turn with radius 20 m. The track is angled at theta. (this angle is the angle the track makes with a perfectly horizontal base in the direction of the perfectly vertical). You have to figure out the maximum speed that is possible on the turn. For this problem you want to find the equilibrium point so that the car does not move vertically up or down the track.
Three questions (for gravity use 9.81)
1. Without friction on the track what is the ideal speed if theta is pi/18?
2. What about if you have a coefficient of static friction of .3 with angle pi/18?
now when i went back to these problems i realized they weren't as hard as they seemed in highschool. so I thought of another problem and have not solved it yet (cant think of how to proceed from where im at, but i haven't tried a linear example) , what if the angle was variable. For example a louge flat on the straight away but banks on the turn.
Now to simplify so the equation of the angle can be linear and not make things as complicated, the turn is now only pi/2 radians. So say the function that defines theta is theta=g(x)=(x/90) with x equaling the distance traveled in meters. What is the time it takes to make this quarter circle turn. for simplicity imagine that the car can be at any speed instantaneously and acceleration in the direction of your velocity is zero. the coefficient of static friction is still .3
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I was remembering back into when I first learned physics I (kinematics) and I remembered a problem that at first gave me some trouble.
A car on a race track has a turn that is a perfectly circular pi radian turn with radius 20 m. The track is angled at theta. (this angle is the angle the track makes with a perfectly horizontal base in the direction of the perfectly vertical). You have to figure out the maximum speed that is possible on the turn. For this problem you want to find the equilibrium point so that the car does not move vertically up or down the track.
Three questions (for gravity use 9.81)
1. Without friction on the track what is the ideal speed if theta is pi/18?
2. What about if you have a coefficient of static friction of .3 with angle pi/18?
now when i went back to these problems i realized they weren't as hard as they seemed in highschool. so I thought of another problem and have not solved it yet (cant think of how to proceed from where im at, but i haven't tried a linear example) , what if the angle was variable. For example a louge flat on the straight away but banks on the turn.
Now to simplify so the equation of the angle can be linear and not make things as complicated, the turn is now only pi/2 radians. So say the function that defines theta is theta=g(x)=(x/90) with x equaling the distance traveled in meters. What is the time it takes to make this quarter circle turn. for simplicity imagine that the car can be at any speed instantaneously and acceleration in the direction of your velocity is zero. the coefficient of static friction is still .3
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