Uniform Circular motion and work done

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2 comments, last by ggs 21 years, 10 months ago
If you have an object undergoing uniform circular motion for a given time, were the force is always perpendicular to the dirction of motion, is it posible to determine to amount of energy required to generate the required force? Since a joule is a newton metre, is it posible to derive how far the object moves and thus how much energy is needed to generate the force? I know the amount of work do by the object it self is zero as the force is perpedicular to the dierction of potion, but I want to find the amount of work done by the body providing the force acting on the 1st body. Am I just confuse or on the right track?
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I''m not really sure if I''ve understood the question, are there other forces involved? friction, wind..?

otherwise the "virtual work principle" will work.
The force F during the movement dS will perform the virtual work dW=F*dS. For a system with several bodies in balance will the total virtual work performed on the whole system made by all the forces be zero.

/P2
What if F = m * v^2 / r (centripetal force acting on the rotating object) and s is the arc length? Since the force doesn''t vary with respect to position (r is constant), W = F*s.
P2, no other forces are involed.


bartkusa, that sounds like what I want.

Thanks for the help.

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