This is clearly homework for science. You need to do this and Wiki won't help you cheat. Time to open the book.
The centripetal force is responsible for providing the centripetal acceleration required to keep an object moving in a circle. As the centripetal force increases, the centripetal acceleration also increases, causing the object to move in a tighter circle. Conversely, a decrease in centripetal force will lead to a decrease in centripetal acceleration, resulting in a wider circle or the object moving off its circular path.
A spinning ball on a string being swung around in a circle is a real life example of centripetal force. The force provided by the string towards the center of the circle is the centripetal force that keeps the ball in circular motion.
The force toward the centre of the circle is called the centripetal force. centrpetal acceleration.
One example of centripetal acceleration is when a car goes around a curve on a road. The car accelerates towards the center of the curve due to the centripetal force required to keep it moving in a curved path.
That is called a centripetal force.
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.
The centripetal force is responsible for providing the centripetal acceleration required to keep an object moving in a circle. As the centripetal force increases, the centripetal acceleration also increases, causing the object to move in a tighter circle. Conversely, a decrease in centripetal force will lead to a decrease in centripetal acceleration, resulting in a wider circle or the object moving off its circular path.
A spinning ball on a string being swung around in a circle is a real life example of centripetal force. The force provided by the string towards the center of the circle is the centripetal force that keeps the ball in circular motion.
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A person walking in a circle A car going around a curve A bicyclist riding around a lake
Yes. That follows from Newton's Second Law: without a centripetal force, there could be no centripetal acceleration. Since the car accelerates towards the center of the circle, it follows that there must be a force that causes this acceleration.
The force toward the centre of the circle is called the centripetal force. centrpetal acceleration.
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It doesn't.Gravity is one thing that can provide centripetal force.Another one is a string, like the one that keeps the yo-yo spinning in a circle around your head.
The force that keeps an object moving in a circle or an arc is called a centripetal force. Gravity is an example of centripetal force that keeps a satellite in a circular orbit around a planet. Another example is when you ride on a merry-go-round - the rotating play structure imparts a centripetal force upon you, forcing you to also travel in a circle.
One example of centripetal acceleration is when a car goes around a curve on a road. The car accelerates towards the center of the curve due to the centripetal force required to keep it moving in a curved path.