a = dv/dt =d(vet)/dt =dv/dt *et+det/dt *v
with det =...
No, acceleration is not uniform in uniformly circular motion. In uniformly circular motion, the direction of the velocity vector is constantly changing, which means there is always a centripetal acceleration acting towards the center of the circle. This centripetal acceleration is not constant in magnitude, making the overall acceleration not uniform.
In uniform circular motion, the force is directed towards the center of the circle, while the acceleration is directed towards the center as well.
Because within circular motion, acceleration is constant
Because there is no tangential force acting on the object in uniform circular motion. The proof that there is no tangential component of acceleration is the fact that the tangential component of velocity is constant.
The direction of acceleration in circular uniform motion is directed towards the center of the circle, which is also known as centripetal acceleration. This acceleration is responsible for keeping an object moving in a circular path instead of moving in a straight line.
no, in uniform circular motion the magnitude of your velocity, and therefore your acceleration is constant. in general this does not need to be true. consider this simple experiment, in a children's playground, go to a roundabout. stand on the roundabout and kick once, then wait for your motion to completely stop before kicking again. your motion is still circular, but neither velocity or acceleration is constant.
In uniform circular motion, the speed of the object remains constant, but the velocity changes direction continuously. The acceleration is directed towards the center of the circle (centripetal acceleration) and its magnitude remains constant. The object moves in a circular path at a constant speed.
Yes, uniform circular motion involves constant speed but changing direction, which means there is acceleration present in the form of centripetal acceleration directed towards the center of the circular path.
The centripetal acceleration of an object in uniform circular motion is directed towards the center of the circular path and is perpendicular to the object's velocity. It is responsible for changing the direction of the object's velocity, keeping it moving in a circular path.
No. Since there is acceleration, it means the forces are not balanced.
linear is which is on a straight path and circular motion is which has a curved path. *In a uniform linear motion,the velocity is constant and the acceleration is zero.So,uniform linear motion is an unaccelerated motion. *In uniform circular motion the velocity can be variable although the speed is uniform.So,it is an accelerated motion.
Uniform circular motion is considered accelerated because the velocity is constantly changing direction, even though the speed remains constant. Since acceleration is defined as any change in velocity, the acceleration in this case is known as centripetal acceleration, directed towards the center of the circle.