centripetal acceleration
The force toward the centre of the circle is called the centripetal force. centrpetal acceleration.
It is constant in magnitude. It is changing in direction.
The acceleration of anything moving at a constant speed in a circle is towards the center of the circle.
This type of acceleration occurs when an object is moving around a circle at a constant speed. As the object moves around the circle, the direction of its velocity is constantly changing. This type of acceleration is called centripetal acceleration. The direction of the acceleration is toward the center of the circle. I hope this answers your question. A car traveling 25 MPH turns 30-degrees to the left without losing speed -- it has accelerated.
If body is moving in a circle with uniform or constant speed its acceleration will be uniform as velocity i.e. to say direction is changing at every point.
Traveling in any direction, but moving is acceleration. if a particle moves in a circle and comes to the initial position, then the velocity would be zero. acceleration is a scalar quantity and not a vector quantity. answered by K.Sreram from India
The direction of the acceleration is towards the center. The magnitude of the acceleration is v2/r.
If the speed of the object doesn't change, then yes.
No! Carousels move in a circle (at least all the carousels I know do) in circular motion there is constant acceleration directed towards the center of the circle of magnitude a=v2/r
When the direction changes. A simple case is an object moving in a circle, at constant speed.
The magnitude of the velocity will be constant however the direction will be constantly changing. The acceleration will remain constant towards the centre of the circle
Nein. If it's moving, by definition it has non-zero velocity.