If you mean centripetal force,
I was surprised when I saw that the water was not spilled when it was swung around in a circle, but then I learned that centripetal force kept it inside.
Always centrifugal is the reaction force for centripetal
only Newtons
The centripetal force is the force with which the centrifuge pushes some object inwards. The opposite force, of course, is the object pushing the centrifuge outwards.
THE centripetal xylem in the stem among the vascular plants is confined to the Pteridophyta and lower gymnosperms, the Pteridospermæ and the Cordaitales. The vegetative stem of Cycadales and Coniferales lacks centripetal xylem; but it occurs in a poorly developed condition in certain conservative regions like the reproductive axes and the leaf traces. In the Gnetales and the angiosperms the axial organs show exclusively the endarch condition, and the centripetal xylem is altogether absent from the primary vascular bundles.
centripetal force...
A ball on a string is an example of centripetal acceleration
If You Mean 'Centripetal', "A curveball uses Centripetal Force".
Centrifugal force is often confused with centripetal force.
The centripetal force
centripetal
"Center-seeking" or "directed to the center" is the definition of centripetal.
no, but rotation can produce centripetal force
Centripetal acceleration is proportional to the square of the speed (a = v2/r). Therefore, according to Newton's Second Law, centripetal force is also proportional to the square of the speed.
That's called 'centripetal acceleration'. It's the result of the centripetal forceacting on the object on the curved path.
No; "centripetal" implies an inward force.
Centripetal acceleration = V2/R = (4)2/(0.5) = 32 meters/sec2The centripetal acceleration doesn't depend on the stone's mass.(The centripetal force does.)The centripetal acceleration doesn't "act on" the stone.(The centripetal force does.)The centripetal force acting on the stone is F = M A = (0.25) (32) = 8 newtons.
Centripetal.