7 CIRCULAR MOTION 7.7 Motion on curved surfaces
v’ (^) R
B
mg cos
mg v
r cos (^)
r
A
mg
Figure 65: Motion on the inside of a vertical hoop.
which reduces to
vJ^2 = v^2 − 2 r g (1 − cos θ). (7.55)
Here, v is the velocity at point A (θ = 0 ◦), and vJ is the velocity at point B
(θ = θ◦).
Let us now examine the radial acceleration of the object at point B. The radial
forces acting on the object are the reaction R of the vertical hoop, which acts
towards the centre of the hoop, and the component m g cos θ of the object’s
weight, which acts away from the centre of the hoop. Since the object is executing
circular motion with instantaneous tangential velocity vJ, it must experience an
instantaneous acceleration vJ^2 /r towards the centre of the hoop. Hence, Newton’s
second law of motion yields
m vJ^2
r
= R − m g cos θ. (7.56)
Note, however, that there is a constraint on the reaction R that the hoop can
exert on the object. This reaction must always be positive. In other words, the
hoop can push the object away from itself, but it can never pull it towards itself.
Another way of putting this is that if the reaction ever becomes negative then