Centripetal Force (Oxford AQA IGCSE Combined Science Double Award)

Revision Note

Centripetal Force

  • A less massive body or object will orbit a more massive body or object

    • For example:

      • A planet orbiting a Sun

      • A satellite orbiting the Earth

  • For any object to be in orbit, there must be a force pulling the object toward the centre of the orbit

  • This force is called the centripetal force

    • For an object in space, the centripetal force is gravity

  • The gravitational force exerted by the more massive body on the orbiting object is always attractive

    • Therefore, the gravitational force always acts towards the centre of the larger body

  • The gravitational force will cause the body to move in a circular path

  • So the gravitational force acts at right angles to the direction of motion

The gravitational attraction of the moon orbiting the Earth

Moon in orbit around the Earth, IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
Gravitational attraction causes the Moon to orbit around the Earth

Centripetal Acceleration

Extension Tier only

  • The force of gravity always acts towards the centre of the orbit

  • This is an unbalanced force and therefore causes acceleration towards the centre of the orbit

    • Constantly changing the direction of motion of the body and therefore its velocity

  • Velocity is a vector quantity

    • Equal to speed in a given direction

  • The speed of the object moving in a circle is constant because it is travelling the same distance every second

    • This means that an object moving in circular motion travels at a constant speed but has a changing velocity

  • An object that has a constantly changing velocity therefore has acceleration

Orbit of the International Space Station (ISS)

ISS circular orbit, for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
The International Space Station’s velocity is always changing - it whizzes around the Earth at a constant speed of about 7660 m/s but is always changing direction

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