radial
(adjective)
Moving along a radius.
Examples of radial in the following topics:
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Overview of Non-Uniform Circular Motion
- The change in speed has implications for radial (centripetal) acceleration.
- A change in $v$ will change the magnitude of radial acceleration.
- The greater the speed, the greater the radial acceleration.
- 2: The radial (centripetal) force is constant (like a satellite rotating about the earth under the influence of a constant force of gravity).
- The important thing to note here is that, although change in speed of the particle affects radial acceleration, the change in speed is not affected by radial or centripetal force.
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Stress and Strain
- If the charge is positive, field lines point radially away from it; if the charge is negative, field lines point radially towards it.
- The above equation is defined in radial coordinates which can be seen in .
- The electric field of a positively charged particle points radially away from the charge.
- The electric field of a negatively charged particle points radially toward the particle.
- The electric field of a point charge is defined in radial coordinates.
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Electric Field from a Point Charge
- If the charge is positive, field lines point radially away from it; if the charge is negative, field lines point radially towards it .
- The above equation is defined in radial coordinates, which can be seen in .
- The electric field of a positively charged particle points radially away from the charge.
- The electric field of a negatively charged particle points radially toward the particle.
- The electric field of a point charge is defined in radial coordinates.
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A single electron in a central field
- If the potential is a function of the radial distance from the nucleus alone the Schrodinger equation is separable,
- $V(r)$ is the radial potential and the term proportional to $l(l+1)$ is the centripetal potential.
- Because the equation does not depend on $m$, the radial wavefunction only depends on $l$.
- Because the radial eigenfunctions for different values of $l$ satisfy different equations, there is no orthogonality relation for the radial wavefunctions with different $l$ values.
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Equipotential Lines
- Since they are located radially around a charged body, they are perpendicular to electric field lines, which extend radially from the center of a charged body.
- For a single, isolated point charge, the formula for potential (V) is functionally dependent upon charge (Q) and inversely dependent upon radial distance from the charge (r):
- The radial dependence means that at any point a certain distance from the point charge, potential will be the same.
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Rotational Collisions
- If the archer releases the arrow with a velocity v1i and the arrow hits the cylinder at its radial edge, what's the final momentum ?
- Initially, the cylinder is stationary, so it has no momentum linearly or radially.
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Circular Motion
- The perpendicular direction to the circular trajectory is, therefore, the radial direction.
- Therefore, the force (and therefore the acceleration) in uniform direction motion is in the radial direction.
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Kinematics of UCM
- Any force or combination of forces can cause a centripetal or radial acceleration.
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Exercises
- It is easy to show, similarly to what we did with the axi-symmetric spherical harmonics, that in the case $k=0$, the radial solutions are of the form $r^m$ and $r^{-m}$ (for $m> 0$).
- To see this just make a trial solution of the form $R(r) = Ar^\alpha$, then show that this satisfies the radial equation if and only if $\alpha^2 = m^2$.
- The radial equation above is almost in the standard form of Bessel's equation.
- and we would have gotten $Z$ solutions proportional to $e^{\pm i k z}$ and the radial equation would have been:
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Spherical Distribution of Charge
- For a positive charge, the direction of the electric field points along lines directed radially away from the location of the point charge, while the direction is towards for a negative charge.