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Autore principale: Simeonov, Lachezar S.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14135
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author Simeonov, Lachezar S.
author_facet Simeonov, Lachezar S.
contents The major difficulty when one teaches about non-inertial reference frames in undergraduate courses on Classical Mechanics is to find an intuitive way to derive the Coriolis acceleration. Indeed, there is a factor of 2 in the formula for the Coriolis acceleration and this factor is shrouded in mystery. In this paper we not only show an intuitive way to derive the Coriolis acceleration but we also show why there is a factor of 2. Indeed, it turns out that the Coriolis acceleration results from two completely different reasons (and hence the factor of 2). The first reason is this - as the particle moves to a new position, it `sees` a different local velocity of the rotating frame. The second reason is purely geometrical - the velocity vector is subjected to purely geometrical rotation due to the rotation of the reference frame. Both of these contributions unite and they result in the Coriolis acceleration.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_14135
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Intuitive Derivation of the Coriolis Force
Simeonov, Lachezar S.
Physics Education
The major difficulty when one teaches about non-inertial reference frames in undergraduate courses on Classical Mechanics is to find an intuitive way to derive the Coriolis acceleration. Indeed, there is a factor of 2 in the formula for the Coriolis acceleration and this factor is shrouded in mystery. In this paper we not only show an intuitive way to derive the Coriolis acceleration but we also show why there is a factor of 2. Indeed, it turns out that the Coriolis acceleration results from two completely different reasons (and hence the factor of 2). The first reason is this - as the particle moves to a new position, it `sees` a different local velocity of the rotating frame. The second reason is purely geometrical - the velocity vector is subjected to purely geometrical rotation due to the rotation of the reference frame. Both of these contributions unite and they result in the Coriolis acceleration.
title Intuitive Derivation of the Coriolis Force
topic Physics Education
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14135