That depends what you mean by "it".
No, centrifugal force is fictitious force, peculiar to circular motion, that is equal but opposite to the centripetal force that keeps a particle on a circular path.
That refers to the centrifugal force.
In any circular movement, including driving in a curve, the centripetal force (and the corresponding centrifugal force, which is often considered a "fictitious force") will increase: * When the speed increases * When the radius of curvature decreases
A fictitious force caused by rotation - it feels as if a force pushes you towards the outside. The magnitude of the ficticious acceleration is equal to the real centripetal acceleration: a = v2/r. The corresponding force can be obtained from Newton's Second Law.
to generate the fictitious force that would transform one reference frame into the other in a single timestep.
You may be referring to the 'fictitious' Coriolis effect or more correctly, Coriolis force. The Coriolis force is a fictitious force that arises from viewing things from the perspective of a rotating reference frame. When viewed from the perspective of an inertial frame, the "force" doesn't appear. We (on Earth) tend to use rotating reference frames because this view is convenient for describing behaviors that nearly co-rotate with Earth. Jeannie Heroux
Always centrifugal is the reaction force for centripetal
No, centrifugal force is fictitious force, peculiar to circular motion, that is equal but opposite to the centripetal force that keeps a particle on a circular path.
That's 'centrifugal' force.
to generate the fictitious force that would transform one reference frame into the other in a single timestep.
That refers to the centrifugal force.
In any circular movement, including driving in a curve, the centripetal force (and the corresponding centrifugal force, which is often considered a "fictitious force") will increase: * When the speed increases * When the radius of curvature decreases
I believe centripetal is considered real, its centrifugal that's not real. It relates to the four fundamental forces.
Force is not a fictitious force; it is a centripetal force that acts towards the center of a circle to keep an object in uniform circular motion. The sensation of feeling pushed outward is due to inertia, as an object's natural tendency is to move in a straight line. The centripetal force counteracts this tendency, causing the object to move in a circle.
A fictitious force caused by rotation - it feels as if a force pushes you towards the outside. The magnitude of the ficticious acceleration is equal to the real centripetal acceleration: a = v2/r. The corresponding force can be obtained from Newton's Second Law.
a) Centrifugal force is not even a real force, it is a fictitious force. b) Action and reaction forces act on DIFFERENT objects. If A acts on B, then B acts on A.
to generate the fictitious force that would transform one reference frame into the other in a single timestep.