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[link] shows a free-body diagram for a car on a frictionless banked curve. If the angle θ is ideal for the speed and radius, then the net external force equals the necessary centripetal force. The only two external forces acting on the car are its weight w and the normal force of the road N . (A frictionless surface can only exert a force perpendicular to the surface—that is, a normal force.) These two forces must add to give a net external force that is horizontal toward the center of curvature and has magnitude m v 2 / r . Because this is the crucial force and it is horizontal, we use a coordinate system with vertical and horizontal axes. Only the normal force has a horizontal component, so this must equal the centripetal force, that is,

N sin θ = m v 2 r .

Because the car does not leave the surface of the road, the net vertical force must be zero, meaning that the vertical components of the two external forces must be equal in magnitude and opposite in direction. From [link] , we see that the vertical component of the normal force is N cos θ , and the only other vertical force is the car’s weight. These must be equal in magnitude; thus,

N cos θ = m g .

Now we can combine these two equations to eliminate N and get an expression for θ , as desired. Solving the second equation for N = m g / ( c o s θ ) and substituting this into the first yields

m g sin θ cos θ = m v 2 r m g tan θ = m v 2 r tan θ = v 2 r g .

Taking the inverse tangent gives

θ = tan −1 ( v 2 r g ) .

This expression can be understood by considering how θ depends on v and r . A large θ is obtained for a large v and a small r. That is, roads must be steeply banked for high speeds and sharp curves. Friction helps, because it allows you to take the curve at greater or lower speed than if the curve were frictionless. Note that θ does not depend on the mass of the vehicle.

What is the ideal speed to take a steeply banked tight curve?

Curves on some test tracks and race courses, such as Daytona International Speedway in Florida, are very steeply banked. This banking, with the aid of tire friction and very stable car configurations, allows the curves to be taken at very high speed. To illustrate, calculate the speed at which a 100.0-m radius curve banked at 31.0 ° should be driven if the road were frictionless.

Strategy

We first note that all terms in the expression for the ideal angle of a banked curve except for speed are known; thus, we need only rearrange it so that speed appears on the left-hand side and then substitute known quantities.

Solution

Starting with

tan θ = v 2 r g ,

we get

v = r g tan θ .

Noting that tan 31.0 ° = 0.609 , we obtain

v = ( 100.0 m ) ( 9.80 m/s 2 ) ( 0.609 ) = 24.4 m/s .

Significance

This is just about 165 km/h, consistent with a very steeply banked and rather sharp curve. Tire friction enables a vehicle to take the curve at significantly higher speeds.

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Airplanes also make turns by banking. The lift force, due to the force of the air on the wing, acts at right angles to the wing. When the airplane banks, the pilot is obtaining greater lift than necessary for level flight. The vertical component of lift balances the airplane’s weight, and the horizontal component accelerates the plane. The banking angle shown in [link] is given by θ . We analyze the forces in the same way we treat the case of the car rounding a banked curve.

Practice Key Terms 6

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Sep 19, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12031/1.5
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