Spatial acceleration

In physics the study of rigid body motion provides for several ways of defining the acceleration state of a rigid body. The classical definition of acceleration entails following a single particle/point along the rigid body and observing its changes of velocity. In this article the notion of spatial acceleration is explored, which entails looking at a fixed (unmoving) point in space and observing the changes of velocity of whatever particle/point happens to coincide with the observation point. This is similar to the acceleration definition fluid dynamics where typically one can measure velocity and/or accelerations on a fixed locate inside a testing apparatus.

Definition

Consider a moving rigid body and the velocity of a particle/point P along the body being a function of the position and velocity of a center particle/point C and the angular velocity .

The linear velocity vector at P is expressed in terms of the velocity vector at C as:

where is the angular velocity vector.

The material acceleration at P is:

where is the angular acceleration vector.

The spatial acceleration at P is expressed in terms of the spatial acceleration at C as:

which is similar to the velocity transformation above.

In general the spatial acceleration of a particle point P that is moving with linear velocity is derived from the material acceleration at P as:

References

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