Centripetal Acceleration and Force
Overview
Centripetal Acceleration and Force explains why an object moving in a circular path requires an acceleration and a resultant inward force, even when its speed is constant.
A common misconception is that constant speed means zero acceleration. This is false because velocity is a vector quantity, and a change in direction means the velocity changes.
This page deepens the core ideas introduced in Circular Motion.
Why It Matters
This is the core physics of circular motion. Students must distinguish the inward acceleration from the real forces that produce it.
Definition
Centripetal acceleration is the inward acceleration required for motion along a circular path. Centripetal force is not an extra force; it is the resultant radial force provided by real physical forces.
Key Representations
Scalar vs Vector Distinction
Scalars
- speed
- mass
- radius
- time
- period
- frequency
Vectors
- velocity
- acceleration
- force
Key Idea
In uniform circular motion:
- speed may remain constant
- velocity changes continuously
Therefore:
- acceleration is non-zero
- resultant force is non-zero
Why Acceleration Exists in Circular Motion
Suppose a particle moves in a circle at constant speed.
At two nearby positions:
- the magnitudes of the velocity vectors are equal
- their directions are different
Hence:
So:
Therefore the particle accelerates.
For uniform circular motion, this acceleration always points toward the centre of the circle.
Centripetal Acceleration
The inward acceleration required to maintain circular motion is called centripetal acceleration.
- centripetal means centre-seeking
Magnitude:
Also:
Where:
- = speed
- = radius
- = angular speed
Direction
The vector acceleration is:
and points toward the centre of the circular path.
Why the Formula Makes Sense
Formula:
Interpretation
- larger speed → larger acceleration needed
- smaller radius → sharper turning → larger acceleration
Example
A racing car moving faster around the same bend needs a much larger inward acceleration.
Angular Form
Using:
Substitute into:
Then:
Useful when angular speed is given.
Centripetal Force
By Newton’s Second Law:
Therefore the inward resultant force needed is:
So:
or
Important Warning: Not a New Force Type
“Centripetal force” is not an extra physical force added to the diagram.
It is the resultant inward force produced by real forces such as:
- tension
- friction
- normal contact force
- gravitational force
- electric force
Example
For a stone tied to a string:
- tension provides centripetal force
For a car on flat road:
- friction provides centripetal force
For a satellite:
- gravity provides centripetal force
Direction and Sign Reasoning
If radial inward direction is chosen positive, then:
If outward is chosen positive, signs must be handled consistently.
At H2 level, choosing inward as positive is usually simplest.
Worked Example 1: Centripetal Acceleration
A ball moves in a circle of radius at speed .
Find centripetal acceleration.
Solution
Toward the centre.
Worked Example 2: Resultant Force
The ball in Example 1 has mass .
Find the required resultant inward force.
Solution
Toward the centre.
Worked Example 3: Angular Speed Form
A disc rotates at angular speed:
A point is from the centre.
Find centripetal acceleration.
Solution
Comparison with Tangential Acceleration
Centripetal Acceleration
- changes direction of velocity
- points inward
Tangential Acceleration
- changes speed
- acts along tangent
In uniform circular motion:
- tangential acceleration = 0
- centripetal acceleration
Common Exam Pitfalls
1. Saying Constant Speed Means No Acceleration
Wrong. Direction changes.
2. Drawing Centripetal Force as Extra Arrow
Wrong. Use only real forces.
3. Wrong Direction
Acceleration and resultant force point toward centre.
4. Using Radius as Diameter
Always check whether given value is radius or diameter.
5. Mixing Speed and Velocity
Use speed in magnitude formulas.
Summary
For circular motion:
- changing direction means changing velocity
- changing velocity means acceleration
- inward acceleration is centripetal acceleration
The required inward resultant force is:
This “centripetal force” is not separate; it is provided by real forces.