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:::I did a google on 'centrifugal force', ignoring the wikipedia I got: == direction of centrifugal force ==


Regarding , asserting that:
* - talks about rotating reference frames
* rotating reference frames
* rotating reference frames
*[http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/HBASE/corf.html[ rotating reference frames/mach principle
* doesn't exist at all
* rotating reference frame
* copy of columbia encyclopedia reactive centrifugal force
* dunno, vague "inertia"
* rotating reference frame
* spam
* not specified, reactive?
* fictitious doesn't really exist
* rotating frames of reference


''ω x (ω x r) is always perpendicular to ω''
Feel free to check these to make sure I've classified them correctly, and do your own googles or other kinds of searches.- (]) '''WolfKeeper''' (]) 00:00, 10 August 2008 (UTC)


I don't think this is true.
:::: You say "3:2 isn't a consensus at all." Could you expand on that comment? Your views were in the minority, and yet you went ahead and made your change, so I pointed out that you couldn't justify your edit based on a clear consensus of the editors. Now your answer is to tell me that "3:2 isn't a consensus at all". I <i>know</i> it isn't a consensus, even less so for the 2 position than for the 3 position, and yet you implemented an edit based on the 2 position. How do you justify this?


If F_centrifugal = mω x (ω x r)
:::: As to your web search results, you unfortunately overlooked one or two, such as


then by the rules of the ]:
:::: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/classical/inverse_square.pdf
:::: http://www.scar.utoronto.ca/~pat/fun/NEWT3D/PDF/CORIOLIS.PDF
:::: http://www-math.mit.edu/~djk/18_022/chapter02/section04.html
:::: http://www.phy.umist.ac.uk/~mikeb/lecture/pc167/gravity/central.html
:::: http://www.cbu.edu/~jholmes/P380/CentralForce.doc
:::: http://www.myoops.org/twocw/mit/NR/rdonlyres/Mechanical-Engineering/2-141Fall-2002/1BEBB815-1441-4698-8D09-3C0E378291F3/0/spring_pendulum.pdf


=F_centrifugal=m(<math> \mathbf{\omega}(\mathbf{\omega}\cdot\mathbf{r}) - \mathbf{r}(\mathbf{\omega}\cdot\mathbf{\omega})</math>
:::: This is just from about 60 seconds worth of browsing. All of these explicitly present as "centrifugal force" the term arising from the basis vectors changing in space, e.g., stationary spherical, cylindrical, polar, parabolic coordinates. I also found a cite that carefully stated centrifugal force appears only in rotating coordinates, and then proceded to derive the centrifugal force in terms of stationary polar coordinates, so one has to be careful to distinguish what people think they are doing from what they are actually doing.
=m(<math> \mathbf{\omega}(\mathbf{\omega}\cdot\mathbf{r}) - \mathbf{r}\omega^2</math>).


Yes, the second term is always radially outward, since it has magnitude <math>m*\omega^2</math> in the r direction, but the first time doesn't have to be 0 so long as <math>\omega</math> and r are not perpendicular.
:::::Careful here. I just gave the top-hits from google, because it's the most unbiased way I know to quickly get a feel for what most people think on a subject (using multiple search engines would improve this further). Clearly there are a variety of views, but the majority are to do with rotating reference frames. Absolutely, ''absolutely'' you can come up with ''many'' references that talk about other ways of dealing with it, but rotating reference frames seems to be the most common, and this is compatible with the wikipedia's article layout. Your links above don't deal with the commonality angle at all.- (]) '''WolfKeeper''' (]) 15:46, 10 August 2008 (UTC)


For example, consider an objective in helical motion such that it is completing counterclockwise circles in xy plane as viewed from +z direction so that its r has a component n the z direction so that <math>\omega</math> has a component in the xy plane. That would make <math>\omega\cdot\mathbf{r} \ne 0</math> and thus ω x (ω x r) has a component in the <math>\mathbf{\omega}</math> direction and is not only radially outward.--] (]) 11:43, 5 June 2017 (UTC)
So based on this, the redirect is currently pointed at ]- (]) '''Wolfkeeper''' (]) 16:32, 25 September 2008 (UTC)


:I have just realised that the formula for centrifugal force you quote from the article was missing a minus sign. But with that correction, yes indeed, {{math|'''''F'''''<sub>centrifugal</sub> {{=}} – ''m'' {('''''ω · r''''') '''''ω''''' – ('''''ω · ω''''') '''''r'''''} }}, and therefore
== Centripetal Force? ==
:::::{{math|'''''ω · F'''''<sub>centrifugal</sub> {{=}} – ''m'' {('''''ω · r''''') ('''''ω · ω''''') – ('''''ω · ω''''') ('''''ω · r''''')} {{=}} 0 }}.
:That is, {{math| '''''F'''''<sub>centrifugal</sub>}} is perpendicular to {{math|'''''ω'''''}}. It is, in fact, a well-known property of the vector ], {{math|'''''a × b'''''}}, that it is ''always'' perpendicular to both of its multiplicands, {{math|'''''a'''''}} and {{math|'''''b'''''}}, and, in particular, –{{math|'''''ω ×''''' ('''''ω × r''''')}} is always perpendicular to {{math|'''''ω'''''}}. It is, in fact, just {{math|''ω''<sup>2</sup>}} times the projection of the vector {{math|'''''r'''''}} onto the plane perpendicular to {{math|'''''ω'''''}}.
:Note also that the centrifugal force is an artefact of the motion of the ''coordinate system'' in which the motion of objects is being described, and this does not necessarily bear any relation whatsoever to the motion of any of those objects themselves. I presume the helical motion you have in mind is one in which the body's position {{math|'''''r'''''(''t'')}} at time {{math|''t''}} is given by something like {{math|'''''r'''''(''t'') {{=}} ''ρ'' cos(''ω t'') '''i''' + ''ρ'' sin(''ω t'') '''j''' + ''v<sub>z</sub> t'' '''k'''}}. But the {{math|''ω''}} in this expression is the angular velocity of ''the body in question'' about the {{math|''z''}} axis, and ''not'' (necessarily) that of the coordinate system in which the motion of the body is being described. If the coordinate system determined by the three unit vectors {{math|'''i'''}}, {{math|'''j'''}} and {{math|'''k'''}} is inertial, for instance, then the angular velocity of that coordinate sytem is zero, and there will be ''no'' centrifugal force on the body in ''that'' coordinate system. For the body to be following such a helical path, there must, of course, be a ''proper'' force,
:::::::: {{math| ''m'' {{overset|'''..'''|'''''r'''''}}(''t'') {{=}} − ''m ω''<sup>2</sup> ( ''ρ'' cos(''ω t'') '''i''' + ''ρ'' sin(''ω t'') '''j''' )}} ,
:acting on it. This force is directed towards, and perpendicular to, the {{math|''z''}} axis of the inertial coordinate system. In a coordinate system whose origin and {{math|''z''}} axis coincide with those of the inertial system, but is rotating with angular velocity {{math|'''''ω''''' {{=}} ''ω'' '''k'''}}, the {{math|''x''}} and {{math|''y''}} coordinates of the body will be constant, and it will be moving with uniform velocity parallel to the {{math|''z''}} axis. In ''this'' coordinate system there will be a centrifugal force {{math| ''m ω''<sup>2</sup> ( ''ρ'' cos(''ω t'') '''i''' + ''ρ'' sin(''ω t'') '''j''' )}} acting on the body which exactly balances the proper force. This centrifugal force is clearly, as it must always be, perpendicular to {{math|'''''ω'''''}}.<br>
:]&nbsp;<small>(]&nbsp;·&nbsp;])</small> 14:21, 5 June 2017 (UTC)


== A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion ==
Why is centripetal force listed here as a branch of centrifugal force? And why is the Leibniz approach to centrifugal force not listed? ] (]) 19:31, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion:
* ]<!-- COMMONSBOT: speedy | 2022-12-09T15:53:00.202461 | Centrifugal force xkcd.png -->
You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —] (]) 15:53, 9 December 2022 (UTC)


== Inertial Motion ==
:Centripetal force is listed as a "related concept", as are the other conceptions, because it's so closely related (like the IP editor on the talk page of the rotating frame article keeps insisting). Leibniz's isn't listed because I haven't seen a description of it that distinguishes it from the rotating reference frame concept; his equation, update to modern notation per sources, is exactly what the rotating reference frame approach comes up with, and the interpretation is also the same, at least in modern terms.
I changed the lead sentence because it's inertial motion and not observation that gives rise to centrifugal force. If an object is drawn to the edge of a rotating system by centrifugal force, this can be observed from any vantage point. Newton's rotating bucket is a prime example. You don't have to be rotating inside the bucket in order to observe the water being pushed against the bucket's walls. ] (]) 21:45, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
:It would be good to add a section on the historical evolution of these concepts, which is where differences are likely to become apparent. We should probably start with , who apparently coined the term. ] (]) 20:16, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
On another point, the last sentence in the top paragraph talks about something called reactive centrifugal force, as though it's something different. It's just the same centrifugal force pushing or pulling against a centripetal force. It would be there anyway, even if the centripetal force wasn't there, and so it's not a reaction. The centripetal force curves the path of the object and it doesn't even have to be equal in magnitude to the centrifugal force unless it is causing circular motion.] (]) 21:52, 14 December 2023 (UTC)


:I'm in favor of simplifying, but that oversimplification crosses into being incorrect. It's not observation that gives rise to centrifugal force, but describing the motion using a rotating/non-inertial coordinate system. From an inertial coordinate system, there is never a reason to invoke this centrifugal force to explain the motion - Newton's second law and a centripetal force are sufficient to explain the Newton's rotating bucket thought experiment. In Newton's thought experiment, it is actually the need to invoke an ad hoc centrifugal force that tells you the coordinate system is rotating. The text follows what is found in reliable sources such as journal articles and university textbooks. If you can indicate where the text does not appear to follow reliable sources, that would be helpful in refining the article. --] (]) 23:35, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
Dick, just because you haven't seen a description of the Leibniz approach which convinces you that it is different from the rotating frames of reference approach is not a reason to suppress references to the existence of the Leibniz approach. The reference which I supplied does not mention frames of reference and I have never seen planetary orbits dealt with using rotating frames of reference. Furthermore, in planetary orbits, the Coriolis force is always in the transverse direction whereas in rotating frames of reference, the Coriolis force swings around like a signpost in the wind that has come loose at the joints. I will now undo your reverts because they were totally out of order.


Well I'm afraid I'll have to disagree with you. The first paragraph mentions mechanical devices that operate on the basis of centrifugal force. How would these work if centrifugal force is only something that depends on the choice of coordinate frame? Surely centrifugal force has to be caused by inertial motion and not by choice of coordinate frame. ] (]) 10:36, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
As for centripteal force, it is adequately mentioned in the reactive centrifugal force section. ] (]) 07:07, 8 May 2009 (UTC)


:I agree with FyzixFighter. I have amended the lead to remove the suggestion that there are mechanical devices that operate on the basis of centrifugal force. Centrifugal force is a fictitious force, and it is lacking in rigour to use this force to attempt to explain the operation of certain rotating machines. Nevertheless there are people who incorporate the words “centrifugal force” into their explanation of operation of these machines.
== References ==
:Centrifugal force is like the ] and ] - scientists now know they don’t exist even though in by-gone days everyone thought they did. ] ''(])'' 12:32, 15 December 2023 (UTC)


In a centrifuge, the material that is rotating with the machine, flies out to the edge because of its tendency to continue in its straight line inertial path. It pushes against the edge of the machine and Archimedes' principle is invoked, segregating the heavier particles from the lighter particles. That's an example of centrifugal force. I don't see this as being an effect that depends on the choice of coordinate frame for analysis. Same principle with a centrifugal clutch or a centrifugal governor. However you might analyse these, there is a force pressing outwards that has a mechanical effect.
FyzixFighter, it was made quite clear in the edits that the reactive centrifugal force appeared in the 1961 Nelkon & Parker, but that it was removed by the 1971 edition. There was no need for you to insert a citation tag. You should have checked how it looked before dicklyon removed most of my edits. Once again, you have arrived at a physics article for the exclusive purpose of undermining my edits. You once said to me that you would only deal in sources and not discuss physics. Now you have got sources. ] (]) 07:17, 8 May 2009 (UTC)
Are you one hundred percent sure about what you have said above? Think about it. I simply can't agree with you. ] (]) 13:01, 15 December 2023 (UTC)


:Thanks for your prompt reply. If you spend some time carefully reading a physics textbook that covers introductory mechanics, and you focus on displacement, velocity and acceleration; and Newton’s laws of motion, we will end up agreeing with each other. When we try to explain some physical phenomenon using our intuition we often fail, showing that intuition is a poor teacher. ] ''(])'' 13:36, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
== Technical ==
I'm going ahead and tagging this article as <nowiki>{{technical}}</nowiki> because I feel that it is especially important that this summary-style article remain ] to the general reader. Those who want a highly technical in-depth analysis will go on to the branch articles. Specifically, I feel that the "Centrifugal force in planetary orbits" section needs some work to make it more readable. Please don't "dumb it down"; and I fully understand that this is not Simple WP; but it should be easily understood by the general public (think of an average high school student) with no technical background in Physics. ] (]) 15:12, 8 May 2009 (UTC)


I don't think that maths needs to come into it at all. And I don't think our intuition is failing us when we observe the phenomenon of centrifugal force having a real physical effect. The non-physics public have usually been aware of centrifugal force since they were children, when they saw somebody swing a bucket of water over their heads and the water not falling out. It seems to me that you have got too distracted by the mathematical analysis, to the extent that you have made yourself believe that centrifugal force as a practical reality is merely a figment of a particular method of mathematical analysis. Before you wrote what you wrote above, I was going to sarcastically suggest that you remove all those references to centrifugal clutches and centrifugal governors etc., just in case the readers might get ideas that conflict with the fictitious narrative which the article seems to be promoting. Anyway, I've said all I can say and so I'll leave you to think about it. ] (]) 16:14, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
In further note, regarding my recent edit, I think I should state for the record that I am not a physicist. I am a linguist and a wikipedian. If I've made mush of any of the finer points of any of the highly technical material presented here in the process of my editing, feel free to correct me, but please do so in a way that avoids getting overly technical and encourages others to maintain civility. Thank you. ] (]) 15:12, 8 May 2009 (UTC)


:We don't need to argue maths or intuition - we could, but we've been down that path before and it rarely helps improve the article. We just need to follow reliable sources. Reliable sources indicate that when we are rigorous in our definition of what is a force (eg, something that appears on the left hand side of Newton's second law), the centrifugal force does not appear in inertial frames. When motion is described in rotating frames/coordinate systems, then it is included in the sum of forces if we want to "bootstrap" of Newton's laws to non-inertial frames. If you have reliable sources that say otherwise, or provide additional insight or commentary not currently found in the article, please share them and help us make this article better. --] (]) 18:09, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
:Looking to by FyzixFighter, I think the passages referring to Bernoulli and Lagrange need a little more clarification. Thank you for the contribution, but please remember that these articles, particularly ''this one'', need to be easily understood by the general reader. ] (]) 02:08, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


OK, I see what you are saying now. You are saying that centrifugal force doesn't conform to the definition of force as per Newton's laws of motion. And of course, that should be stated in the article. But I've been thinking more about the matter, and I think you are giving undue weight to a scientific definition of force, over the head of the common understanding of the very real phenomenon known as centrifugal force.
::I'll see what I can do. It's the Meli article that refers specifically to Bernoulli and Lagrange. It mentions a few others, but article goes into quite a bit of detail on Bernoulli's contribution arguing that it is in his works where "the idea that the centrifugal force is fictitious emerges unmistakably." I'll see about distill it down to a non-technical but accurate summary, but another set of eyes that has access to the article would be appreciated. In the case of Lagrange, Meli doesn't go into great detail; he just says that Lagrange's work was the main text on mechanics in the second half of the 18th century and that Lagrange explicitly stated that the centrifugal force was dependent on the rotation of a system of perpendicular axes. To say any more on Lagrange would probably need another "history of mechanics"-type reliable source - I'll keep looking. --] (]) 03:29, 9 May 2009 (UTC)
Look at it this way. A car swerves round a corner at high speed and a passenger gets flung out the back door. We would all agree that this was because of the passenger's tendency to continue in their straight line inertial path. And this tendency caused the passenger to push against the car door, causing the car door to open and the passenger to be thrown out into the road. Now we'll all agree that this tendency was very real. But are we not allowed to call this tendency centrifugal force?
:::I know this can be frustrating, and I really don't mean to be tendentious, but I really think the Bernoulli passage is still a bit technical. ''Bernoulli, in seeking to describe the motion of an object relative to an arbitrary point, showed that the magnitude of the centrifugal force depended on which arbitrary point was chosen'' - so far so good (the average high school student could probably grasp it), but then, ''and not inherently determined by the properties of the problem.'' I'm not sure what ''the properties of the problem'' means exactly, and I'm sure most of our readers will be left wondering as well. Sorry, but I really want to make sure we avoid jargon and highly technical explanations on this page, for the sake of those without any special background in physics. ] (]) 13:07, 9 May 2009 (UTC)
What exactly is it that you are claiming is only an illusion in a rotating frame of reference? We can't write off the tendency to be pushed against the door, simply on the grounds that it is only an illusion under a certain kind of mathematical analysis. The effect is very real, and it's now clear to me that this discussion is purely over semantics. It's all about whether or not we are allowed to refer to, what is commonly known as centrifugal force, by its common name.
I think we're all agreed that centrifugal force, under the common understanding, arises as a result of inertial motion, and not because of any choice of coordinate frame. But I do see your argument that centrifugal force within the common understanding does not conform with the strictly scientific definition of force as per Newton's laws of motion.
I think the common understanding of centrifugal force should come first in the article, followed by the clarification that it is a local term not strictly in line with the definition of force as is used in Newtonian mechanics.
I say this, because as the article stands now, it is counter intuitive, giving the impression that what most people see as a real effect with a familiar name, can be made to become an illusion by mathematicians operating in a rotating frame of reference. Those devices listed in the introduction really do operate by centrifugal force under the common understanding. You cannot write that fact off by insisting that it doesn't conform to a strict scientific definition of force. The issue is semantics, not physics. ] (]) 20:15, 15 December 2023 (UTC)


:And one final comment. The issue of contention lies totally with the fact that a centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. But its physical effect in a rotating space station for the purpose of simulating weight, is identical to that of the force of gravity. Therefore it's more accurate to state that centrifugal force is a force in a different category of forces than Newtonian forces. It's a bit like that a lion and a tiger are both cats, but a lion isn't a tiger. A Newtonian force and a centrifugal force are both forces, but a centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. I can't get this idea of writing centrifugal force off completely, as an illusion in a rotating frame, just because it isn't a Newtonian force. In fact, more accurately a centrifugal force is an inertial force, independent of whatever mathematical way we analyse it. ] (]) 23:03, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
::::No problem. I don't mind the specific, constructive criticism. Let me think on it a bit to see if I can come up with a better wording. The idea from Meli that I'm trying to convey with ''properties of the problem'' are the inherent attributes of the bodies involved that all observers will agree on, such as mass, relative distance between bodies, charge, the elasticity of the bodies, etc. - at least that's my reading of Meli's statement. The values of these quantities don't depend on any of the observer's choices (at least in the classical sense) and so neither will the forces that result from these quantities, whereas the value for the centrifugal force does depend on the observer's choice of reference frame. Can you think of a concise but non-technical jargon-laced way to say this? --] (]) 14:05, 9 May 2009 (UTC)
::Hence the article we have on this other category of forces, ], which you will find is linked in the opening sentence of the article by one of its other names, 'Inertial force'. No changes appear to be needed to the article. ] (]) 23:15, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
:You have written “A car swerves round a corner at high speed and a passenger gets flung out the back door. ... ...” This is a useful example and it is worth examining in further detail.
: The car and its occupants are all travelling in a straight line at constant speed so the net force acting on each one is zero. The car then swerves and the passenger is ejected from the car and continues in a straight line at constant speed, at least for a short time. As the passenger is leaving the car a centrifugal force is acting on this unfortunate person. Once clear of the vehicle, the centrifugal force acting on the passenger falls to zero again. You are suggesting that the commencement of the centrifugal force, its magnitude, direction and duration are not determined by the trajectory of the passenger, but by the trajectory of the car. That is not consistent with Newton’s second law. ] ''(])'' 01:37, 16 December 2023 (UTC)


Mr. Ollie. The first sentence in this article confuses the issue. We're agreed that centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. Therefore we need to remove the bit where it says "in Newtonian mechanics". The next bit where it says that centrifugal force is an inertial force is fine. But then it immediately delves into the issue that I first raised. Just because it is an inertial force doesn't mean that it is an illusion only observed in a rotating frame of reference. It's no illusion that centrifugal force can be used to simulate the weight of gravity in a rotating space station. I thought we had it all sorted when you correctly drew my attention to the fact that centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. But it seems that you still think it is an illusion, dependent on choice of coordinate frame. This is clearly not the case. ] (]) 23:39, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
FyzixFighter, I'd be very surprised if Bernoulli had advocated that centrifugal force is fictitious. I have this quote from Whittaker 'A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity; The Classical Theories (London; New York, American Institute of Physics, 1987) p.6'


:The only one who has used the word 'illusion' is you. ] (]) 00:00, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
''ET Whittaker writes “ - - - All space, according to the young Bernoulli, is permeated by a fluid Aether, containing an immense number of excessively small whirlpools. The elasticity which the Aether appears to possess, and in virtue of which it is able to transmit vibrations, is really due to the presence of these whirlpools; for, owing to centrifugal force, each whirlpool is continually striving to dilate, and so presses against the neighbouring whirlpools - - -''


Mr. Ollie. It says in the first sentence, ''"appears to act on all objects when viewed in a rotating frame of reference"''. I interpret that as stating that it is only an illusion. But we know that it is not an illusion. It may not be a Newtonian force, but it is still a force, and it can have the same physical effect as a Newtonian force, as per the example I gave of weight being caused by rotation in a space station. I suggest that the introduction runs through the following key points,
It's within this context that I am particularly interested in centrifugal force. I had been aware of the Leibniz approach since 1979 but I didn't start questioning the conventional wisdom that centrifugal force is only fictitious until I tried to understand Maxwell's 1861 paper. I noticed that Maxwell was using the concept of centrifugal pressure between vortices in a similar sense to Bernoulli. I then extrapolated the Leibniz approach to the idea of two adjacent two body orbits and considered the centrifugal force term in relation to the mutual transverse speed as between objects criss-crossed between each system. It suggested that the two orbits would repel each other if the mutual transverse speeds were high enough, and that centrifugal force is indeed real.


'''''″When an object is forced to rotate in a rotating system, a centrifugal force draws it away from the centre of rotation, due to the tendency of the object to continue along its uniform straight line inertial path. Centrifugal force is therefore an inertial force and not a Newtonian force, as the latter kind is not involved in uniform straight line motion. Centrifugal force is often analysed in a frame of reference that rotates with the rotating system″'''''
You mentioned how Bernoulli had said that centrifugal force needs to be relative to a point origin. I would certainly agree with that, but that is not the same as saying that it needs to be associated with a rotating frame of reference. As regards the concept of rotating frames of reference, you will probably find that it began with rotating rigid bodies when they fixed a frame of reference inside those bodies to aid with the description of the motion. That'll be the Lagrange connection. I blame Coriolis (1835), for letting the concept become detached from physical reality. ] was only interested in the physical forces associated with rotating water wheels, but he failed to see what was eventually called the ] in his first category of supplementary forces when considering the induced forces that oppose the dragging forces in a rotating frame. It seems that he didn't consider a constrained radial motion on a turntable, such as a marble running along a radial groove. Coriolis then took his 'compound centrifugal force' (Coriolis force) from the mathematical transformation equations (his second category of supplementary forces) and hence created a concept which had become totally detached from its physical context. It was a like a signpost that had become loose at the pole and allowed to blow in the wind. That is the disjointed basis for the modern science of rotating frames of reference.


In fact, that's about all there is to it. It's not a very extensive topic. ] (]) 00:28, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
I think that its time now to stand back and appraise this situation in a balanced way. You seem to be very keen to undermine all the physics edits which I make. Your record since I opened my account shows that you have only ever come to physics articles to undermine my edits. there are no exceptions to that rule. You are now trying too hard to package the Leibniz approach into the 'rotating frames' approach. If you were to fully consider the merits of the Leibniz approach, you might find that in a few days time you won't feel the need to bury it anymore.


:The "Appears to act" version is correct. Your suggestion is incorrect because it leaves out crucial information. If an observer is outside of the rotating system, they will not observe any such force - that is what distinguishes a fictitious force. It only 'appears' when the observer (that is, the frame of reference) is undergoing acceleration (in this case as rotation). ] (]) 00:42, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
Think about it this way. Could you fix a rotating frame of reference around two adjacent two body planetary orbits? ] (]) 11:43, 9 May 2009 (UTC)
:David, please refrain from making any accusations. True or not, they serve only to perpetuate the edit warring. If you really believe someone is ] you, go to ]. But please do not continue to post accusations on the talk pages. It doesn't help us work together or build consensus. ] (]) 12:37, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


:(after ec) As MrOllie points out, that definition is incorrect and not supported by reliable sources. An object does not need to be forced to rotate in a rotating system for the centrifugal force to act on it. In the inertial frame there is no force that is pushing the passenger into the wall of the car or pushing astronauts against the floor in a spinning space station. Our intuition that there is one is due to our observations being in the non-inertial frame.
===Models or examples===
:The centrifugal force that you mention is as real as the apparent force one feels pulling down when going up in an elevator. In the inertial frame the effects in the car, space station, and elevator are due to inertia and require no new force. In my opinion this is evident when we consider an object that is stationary in the inertial frame - when viewed in a rotating frame, the object appears to be moving in a circle and therefore undergoing centripetal acceleration. In the rotating frame, the centripetal acceleration is attributed to a combination of fictitious/inertial forces - the centrifugal force pointed outward and a Coriolis force pointed inward. The centrifugal force in this situation is the same as what arises for the passenger and astronauts, and appears because the frame has a rotational acceleration relative to the inertial frame. This is what reliable sources say. Again if you have reliable sources that say otherwise or clarify the concept, then please share. --] (]) 00:59, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
I think it would help the article, it would help the general reader and it would certainly help me, if we could provide some simple models or concrete examples of each of these scenarios and phenomena to illustrate some of the more difficult concepts in a more intuitive way. Of course (and here is perhaps the real challenge) even in this pursuit we must still stick to reliable sources, lest anyone become accused of inserting their own synthesis. Anybody got any good ones in the original sources? ] (]) 12:45, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


Dolphin51, You misrepresented what I said above. I said that when the car swerves, centrifugal force throws the passenger against the door of the car, due to the tendency of the passenger to undergo his uniform straight line inertial path. We were already agreed that this centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force, but it is a force nevertheless. ] (]) 09:30, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
:I just added (though I forgot to login) a physical example for the reactive centrifugal force. It's taken from the Roche source. It's a little technical in terms of engineering, but it gives it a real-world, oily physical machine touch <cue Tim Allen's simian "Grunt">. If other editors think it's too technical, then we can use the old object being spun around on a string example which Roche also uses. --] (]) 17:47, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


:Mr. Ollie, There is a paragraph in this link about how a centrifugal clutch works. We don't have to be rotating with the clutch in order it observe it working. https://www.lancereal.com/centrifugal-clutch-explained/ And here's another about the centrifugal pump, https://www.northridgepumps.com/article-346_what-is-a-centrifugal-pump You claimed above that we only observe the centrifugal force if we are in a rotating frame. This is obviously not the case. ] (]) 09:33, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
FyzixFighter, Regarding the Bernoulli reference, I don't think that you can make the deduction which you did regarding the issue of frames of reference. Bernoulli clearly points out that centrifugal force varies according to which point of reference that we choose. That is a fact of which I am well aware, and I have made my own conclusions about it. I don't intend to insert my own conclusions in the article. But you saw from my edit above that one of the Bernoulli's believed that space is filled with tiny vortices that press against each other due to centrifugal force. I have a theory that these vortices are rotating electric dipoles. It's an established fact that an electric dipole is surrouded by an inverse cube law force field. Hence if a body moves through a sea of such dipoles, it will experience an inverse cube law repulsive force relative to any arbitrarily chosen point, providing that the effect is induced by transverse motion relative to that point. That would mean that centrifugal force is built into Euclidean geometry and it would explain why centrifugal force does not show up in Cartesian coordinates. Centrifugal force hence becomes a property of absolute space and not a property of any frame of reference. That's what Newton's ] showed. But that is only my own interpretation of the situation. I don't intend to insert it. Likewise, you are entitled to deduce that Bernoulli's statement regarding centrifugal force varying according to the point of origin implies that Bernoulli was thinking in terms of frames of reference. But you are not entitled to insert that opinion into the main article.] (]) 18:41, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


::Fyzixfighter, If an object in a rotating system doesn't rotate with the system, say due to lack of friction for example, then the object will not move outwards. There will be no centrifugal force. You seem to be totally absorbed in the mathematical analysis from the perspective of a rotating frame of reference, to the neglect of the actual concept of centrifugal force itself. Your example of viewing a stationary object from a rotating frame of reference is a totally unnatural example which turns the whole topic upside down. It was like asking how do children on a roundabout see a stationary child on the ground below the roundabout. The stationary child experiences no centrifugal force, while the ones on the roundabout see the stationary child moving in a circle. Meanwhile you are trying to use maths to account for why the child on the ground experiences no centrifugal force, as in, because it is cancelled by another fictitious force. That is totally inverted logic, well over the top. As regards reliable sources, that would be fine if reliable sources all spoke with a single narrative. But they don't. Reliable sources are a morass of confusion telling many different narratives. Some talk about rotating frames and fictitious forces, some talk about Newton's third law, and some think there has to be circular motion. It won't be possible to taper the article to the correct balance of reliable sources until there is first some evidence of comprehension of the topic on the part of the editors. So, are we first going to try and reason it out using natural reasoning, or are we going to use the canard about reliable sources every time a point is made that undermines the current narrative in the article? What about this source here, https://www.irjet.net/archives/V4/i1/IRJET-V4I1185.pdf ? It says in the abstract that the centrifugal governor works by centrifugal force. It doesn't say that it only works if you are rotating with the apparatus. And by the way, your analogy about the elevator was wrong. When an elevator accelerates upwards, the people feel an upward force coming from the elevator floor. No inertial forces are involved, and the floor exerts an active force on the people. But in the rotating space station, centrifugal force pushes the people against the floor. It's the other way around. ] (]) 09:36, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
:I'm not making any deduction about what Bernoulli (note this is Daniel Bernoulli, Johann Bernoulli's son) meant in his memoir. That would be original synthesis from a primary source. What I am doing is reporting what a published author says about Daniel Bernoulli's memoir in a reliable source. Your recent edit to that sentence now bears little resemblance to the statement found in that reliable source. I will make the sentence in line with the reference cited. --] (]) 19:50, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


We've been down this path multiple times before. The archives are full of lengthy discussions with multiple editors, one in particular (FDT/David Tombe), that led to only marginal improvements in the article and certain editors (eg, FDT/David Tombe) being banned from physics-related articles and discussions. I'm not seeing anything new in this discussion, and in fact it seems to be largely rehashing those previous discussions. As we've fallen into trying to teach each other "correct" physics/semantics, I really don't see any further value in talk page discussion - this isn't a forum or discussion board. Perhaps an RFC or other dispute resolution avenue would be beneficial if you feel that there is a specific improvement needed in the article. --] (]) 16:19, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
FyzixFighter, before you do so, can you not balance it out with what I wrote regarding Coriolis's role in the field of rotating frames of reference? Coriolis is much more relevant than anything that Bernoulli ever had to say on the issue of rotating frames of reference and fictitious forces. Why are you so keen to insert a quote by a man in the year 1990? It spoils the whole flow of the section. ] (]) 19:57, 9 May 2009 (UTC)


:Well, if you've been down this path multiple times before, then maybe it's time to take note of the fact that the lead paragraph contains a ridiculous contradiction. On the one hand it lists mechanical devices that operate on the principle of centrifugal force, while on the other hand it claims that centrifugal force is only an illusion seen by those in a rotating frame of reference. I have explained to you, that you have got yourself absorbed in the mathematical analysis of centrifugal force in a rotating frame, at the expense of the concept itself. Just because it is not a Newtonian force doesn't mean that it is not a force. It still pushes and pulls. I have supplied references above that contradict the view that centrifugal force is only an illusion observed from a rotating frame of reference, and so there's not much more that I can do to help. Whatever, the article as it stands, is a total morass of confusion. By the way, I see reference to another article called "reactive centrifugal force". There is no such thing. It's just inertial centrifugal force pushing or pulling against an obstacle. Was that article, by any chance, started up in order to package away out of sight all scenarios that exposed centrifugal force as a frame-independent force? ] (]) 16:55, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
== Experts, debates, competing, etc. ==
::{{tq|Was that article, by any chance, started up in order to package away out of sight all scenarios that exposed centrifugal force as a frame-independent force?}} You will find that launching conspiracy theories will not help your arguments. It seems that we are done here. ] (]) 16:59, 16 December 2023 (UTC)


Well if I am wrong, then why aren't those examples simply included in this article? Why did they have to be sided off to a separate article? ] (]) 17:05, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
Let's don't put stuff into the article to portray the various conceptions as something involved in controversy, debates, argument among experts, etc., unless we have sources to that effect and identify the players. From all that I've read, the concepts and experts seem to co-exist peacefully, though sometimes a clarification is needed as to what technical on non-technical concept of centrifugal force is meant in a given situation. ] (]) 16:12, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

I added some sources on the historical debates about absolute and relative motion; these can obviously stay. Brews is pretty keen on this idea, and it should expanded somewhere if it's not already; there's not much in ]. ] (]) 17:08, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

::Dick, your edits are within the basic framework for a new settlement to this long running edit war. I like the historical introduction, but there is one line which I wish to question you about. I have just left a note on Wilhelm's talk page and I mentioned that very point. I don't anticipate any further edit wars providing that the supporters of the 'rotating frames/fictitious' approach don't try to subsume the Leibniz approach.

::Was there any need to mention that the planetary orbital equation (The Kepler problem) can be treated within the context of a rotating frame of reference? I did that topic in detail in 1979 at university using Williams's 'Dynamics'. I saw quite a number of methods for solving the radial second order differential equation in question. But I never saw any attempt to solve that problem using rotating frames of reference. The next year, I used Goldstein to do Lagrangian and rotating rigid body motion. As you can see, Goldstein does not use rotating frames of reference in connection with planetary orbits. Leibniz does not use rotating frames of reference either. So why the need to mention rotating frames in this context?

::Let's recap what the edit war was all about. It was all about everybody but myself making sure that the Leibniz approach was kept off the page. At first I was accused of introducing original research. It took me a while to get my act together and dig up a Goldstein. But when I did, the Leibniz method was still rejected. You can look at how my first attempts to introduce the planetary orbital equation were reverted last July 2008. It indirectly led to me getting a nearly permanent block.

::And now when finally the Leibniz method has been recognized due to the arrival of more sources, it seems that you are trying to subsume it into the rotating frames approach. Let's be quite clear about this. The two approaches differ in three important respects.

::(1) In the rotating frames approach, centrifugal force is fictitious. In the Leibniz approach, centrifugal force is real.

::(2) In the rotating frames approach, great significance is attached to the actual rotating frames themselves. In the Leibniz approach, there are no rotating frames.

::(3) In the rotating frames approach, the Coriolis force swivels as like a weather cock on a pole. In the Leibniz approach, the Coriolis force is firmly fixed in the transverse direction.

::So we cannot subsume the Leibniz approach into the rotating frames approach. On the centrifugal force (rotating frames of reference) page, I could see that you were all desperately trying to tangle the planetary orbital problem up with rotating frames. You were doing this as a result of momentum from the edit war. This needs to stop. Each approach now needs to be dealt with separately and in isolation, and that is the best way to ensure that there will be no return to an edit war.

::So I intend to remove that sentence in the introduction which drags rotating frames of reference into the Kepler problem. There are no rotating frames of reference in the Kepler problem. ] (]) 17:13, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

:::I think you're fooling yourself when you say it was "all about everybody but myself making sure that the Leibniz approach was kept off the page." I introduced the Leibniz approach, and have never tried to keep it or the Goldstein approach suppressed. On the other hand, it's true that it's pretty much everyone else against you. Maybe some thoughtful self-examination is in order. ] (]) 17:20, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

Dick, you brought it to my attention that it was the Leibniz approach and I'm grateful to you for that. I didn't realize that that approach originated with Leibniz until you showed me that link last week. But nevertheless it was that approach that I had known for 28 years when I began to try and insert it into wikipedia in early 2007. I had always known that it wasn't a Newtonian approach, and it had been my intention for years to study Newton's Principiae to try and find out exactly how Newton solved the Kepler problem. I knew that Newton got as far as the inverse square law of gravity and that he also invented calculus. On the other hand, I knew how to use Newton's law of gravity, calculus, and the inverse cube law centrifugal force to solve the Kepler problem, but I knew that it wasn't Newton's method. By producing that Leibniz reference, you have solved a long standing mystery for me. It all ties in perfectly with the notorious animosity between Newton and Leibniz. Now that I have it all clear, I can better discuss the reactive centrifugal force which I still disagree with. We're all now beginning to see how it all fits together. The initial days of the edit war in 2007 involved some editors who have long disappeared. But the thrust of it was always that they were dug into the 'rotating frames/fictitious' concept whereas I wanted a real outward centrifugal force.

On a point of curiosity, have you ever considered two × two body problems side by side in their mutual equatorial planes? If you adopt the Leibniz approach, you will be able to criss-cross a centrifugal repulsion between any pair amongst the four, providing the angular speeds are high enough. The two orbits will repel. That's how Maxwell explained magnetic repulsion. He used a sea of tiny vortices aligned solenoidally. ] (]) 20:07, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

:No, I really don't know much about this stuff. Just going by what I find in books. ] (]) 04:50, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

== Physics and engineering dichotomy ==

Dick, I think I can live with not stating the dichotomy in the intro. But just to clarify where that came from, the Roche 2001 article is the one that casts the fictitious vs. reactive as a physics vs. engineering dichotomy. In it he states, "I have identified at least three interpretations of centrifugal force in the literature: a valid meaning in physics, an entirely different but equally valid meaning in engineering, and a cluster of false meanings." The two distinct concepts he goes on to talk about are the fictitious and reactive centrifugal forces. Since the physics/engineering dichotomy is touched on in the "reactive" section, that can be sufficient for me. Anyways, Cheers. --] (]) 05:12, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

:OK, thanks; no problem with it if it comes with a citation. It's funny though, as I was just discussing this with an engineering prof who assures me it's common to use the rotating-frame approach in Mech. Eng. and robotics. ] (]) 05:39, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

Dick and FyzixFighter, It might help to calm down the edit war if everybody were to openly admit their preference. I have openly admitted that I am only in favour of the Leibniz approach. But I will not be trying to obliterate or hide the other approaches. I am not particularly interested in the 'rotating frames' approach since, in my opinion, it contains some serious errors, particularly in relation to where it has allowed the Coriolis force to swing freely like a weather cock.

It would seem to me that you are clearly committed to the 'rotating frames' approach. That's fair enough. But try not to loose sight of the contexts within which that approach is used in the textbooks. It is used mainly in relation to Coriolis problems in meteorology and missiles being fired on rotating platforms etc. In my days, it was never used in connection with the Kepler problem. You would have a hard job inserting a co-rotating frame of reference around a three body problem.

As regards the Newtonian 'reactive centrifugal force', I think that we all disagree with it and at any rate it has disappeared from the textbooks in recent years. But we can still write about it and explain its historical origins in connection with Newton's animosity towards Leibniz. The reactive approach still appears to be of interest to engineers.

As regards the issue of preferences, I have explained fully why I prefer the Leibniz approach. It is an 'all in one' approach which can explain any scenario. Start with a weak gravity hyperbolic two body problem. Then attach a string between the two bodies. The centrifugal force will pull the string taut. The induced tension in the string will then cause an inward centripetal force on top of gravity and change the orbit to circular.

Can you and FyzixFighter give me any reasons why you are so keen to promote the 'rotating frames' approach? ] (]) 12:02, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

== The connection between rotating frames and the Kepler problem? ==

Regarding this line in the main article,

''In modern science based on Newtonian mechanics, Leibniz's centrifugal force is a subset of this conception and is a result of his viewing the motion of a planet from the standpoint of a special reference frame co-rotating with the planet.''

I have never seen the planetary orbital problem dealt with using a rotating frame of reference, and I have seen it done many ways using both force and energy equations. The modern science of rotating frames of reference never writes centrifugal force in its inverse cube law form, and indeed it is generally more interested in the Coriolis force. It would be impossible to insert a co-rotating frame of reference around a three body problem. So I cannot see how Leibniz's real centrifugal force can possibly be considered to be a subset of anything to do with rotating frames of reference. I don't doubt that in recent years some scientists have tried to deal with the Kepler problem using rotating frames of reference. But it definitely isn't necessary to do so and it would be a most cumbersome thing to do considering that the rate of rotation is varying. We would we bother and why do we need to have this sentence in the article? What is the exact line in the quoted reference which clarifies the reasons for this point? ] (]) 19:19, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

== Bernoulli ==

FyzixFighter, regarding this line which you inserted in the main article,

''In a 1746 memoir by Daniel Bernoulli, the "idea that the centrifugal force is fictitious emerges unmistakably."''

who exactly made that quote regarding centrifugal force being unmistakably fictitious? ] (]) 19:44, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

:The author of the reliable source that is cited following that statement. --] (]) 19:53, 9 May 2009 (UTC)

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direction of centrifugal force

Regarding this edit, asserting that:

ω x (ω x r) is always perpendicular to ω

I don't think this is true.

If F_centrifugal = mω x (ω x r)

then by the rules of the :

=F_centrifugal=m( ω ( ω r ) r ( ω ω ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {\omega } (\mathbf {\omega } \cdot \mathbf {r} )-\mathbf {r} (\mathbf {\omega } \cdot \mathbf {\omega } )} =m( ω ( ω r ) r ω 2 {\displaystyle \mathbf {\omega } (\mathbf {\omega } \cdot \mathbf {r} )-\mathbf {r} \omega ^{2}} ).

Yes, the second term is always radially outward, since it has magnitude m ω 2 {\displaystyle m*\omega ^{2}} in the r direction, but the first time doesn't have to be 0 so long as ω {\displaystyle \omega } and r are not perpendicular.

For example, consider an objective in helical motion such that it is completing counterclockwise circles in xy plane as viewed from +z direction so that its r has a component n the z direction so that ω {\displaystyle \omega } has a component in the xy plane. That would make ω r 0 {\displaystyle \omega \cdot \mathbf {r} \neq 0} and thus ω x (ω x r) has a component in the ω {\displaystyle \mathbf {\omega } } direction and is not only radially outward.--Louiedog (talk) 11:43, 5 June 2017 (UTC)

I have just realised that the formula for centrifugal force you quote from the article was missing a minus sign. But with that correction, yes indeed, Fcentrifugal = – m {(ω · r) ω – (ω · ω) r} , and therefore
ω · Fcentrifugal = – m {(ω · r) (ω · ω) – (ω · ω) (ω · r)} = 0 .
That is, Fcentrifugal is perpendicular to ω. It is, in fact, a well-known property of the vector cross product, a × b, that it is always perpendicular to both of its multiplicands, a and b, and, in particular, –ω × (ω × r) is always perpendicular to ω. It is, in fact, just ω times the projection of the vector r onto the plane perpendicular to ω.
Note also that the centrifugal force is an artefact of the motion of the coordinate system in which the motion of objects is being described, and this does not necessarily bear any relation whatsoever to the motion of any of those objects themselves. I presume the helical motion you have in mind is one in which the body's position r(t) at time t is given by something like r(t) = ρ cos(ω t) i + ρ sin(ω t) j + vz t k. But the ω in this expression is the angular velocity of the body in question about the z axis, and not (necessarily) that of the coordinate system in which the motion of the body is being described. If the coordinate system determined by the three unit vectors i, j and k is inertial, for instance, then the angular velocity of that coordinate sytem is zero, and there will be no centrifugal force on the body in that coordinate system. For the body to be following such a helical path, there must, of course, be a proper force,
m ..r(t) = − m ω ( ρ cos(ω t) i + ρ sin(ω t) j ) ,
acting on it. This force is directed towards, and perpendicular to, the z axis of the inertial coordinate system. In a coordinate system whose origin and z axis coincide with those of the inertial system, but is rotating with angular velocity ω = ω k, the x and y coordinates of the body will be constant, and it will be moving with uniform velocity parallel to the z axis. In this coordinate system there will be a centrifugal force m ω ( ρ cos(ω t) i + ρ sin(ω t) j ) acting on the body which exactly balances the proper force. This centrifugal force is clearly, as it must always be, perpendicular to ω.
David Wilson (talk · cont) 14:21, 5 June 2017 (UTC)

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Inertial Motion

I changed the lead sentence because it's inertial motion and not observation that gives rise to centrifugal force. If an object is drawn to the edge of a rotating system by centrifugal force, this can be observed from any vantage point. Newton's rotating bucket is a prime example. You don't have to be rotating inside the bucket in order to observe the water being pushed against the bucket's walls. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:8D3C:FAAF:EB21:11FE (talk) 21:45, 14 December 2023 (UTC) On another point, the last sentence in the top paragraph talks about something called reactive centrifugal force, as though it's something different. It's just the same centrifugal force pushing or pulling against a centripetal force. It would be there anyway, even if the centripetal force wasn't there, and so it's not a reaction. The centripetal force curves the path of the object and it doesn't even have to be equal in magnitude to the centrifugal force unless it is causing circular motion.2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:8D3C:FAAF:EB21:11FE (talk) 21:52, 14 December 2023 (UTC)

I'm in favor of simplifying, but that oversimplification crosses into being incorrect. It's not observation that gives rise to centrifugal force, but describing the motion using a rotating/non-inertial coordinate system. From an inertial coordinate system, there is never a reason to invoke this centrifugal force to explain the motion - Newton's second law and a centripetal force are sufficient to explain the Newton's rotating bucket thought experiment. In Newton's thought experiment, it is actually the need to invoke an ad hoc centrifugal force that tells you the coordinate system is rotating. The text follows what is found in reliable sources such as journal articles and university textbooks. If you can indicate where the text does not appear to follow reliable sources, that would be helpful in refining the article. --FyzixFighter (talk) 23:35, 14 December 2023 (UTC)

Well I'm afraid I'll have to disagree with you. The first paragraph mentions mechanical devices that operate on the basis of centrifugal force. How would these work if centrifugal force is only something that depends on the choice of coordinate frame? Surely centrifugal force has to be caused by inertial motion and not by choice of coordinate frame. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:58A2:F0FE:6C9A:FB30 (talk) 10:36, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

I agree with FyzixFighter. I have amended the lead to remove the suggestion that there are mechanical devices that operate on the basis of centrifugal force. Centrifugal force is a fictitious force, and it is lacking in rigour to use this force to attempt to explain the operation of certain rotating machines. Nevertheless there are people who incorporate the words “centrifugal force” into their explanation of operation of these machines.
Centrifugal force is like the luminiferous aether and caloric - scientists now know they don’t exist even though in by-gone days everyone thought they did. Dolphin (t) 12:32, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

In a centrifuge, the material that is rotating with the machine, flies out to the edge because of its tendency to continue in its straight line inertial path. It pushes against the edge of the machine and Archimedes' principle is invoked, segregating the heavier particles from the lighter particles. That's an example of centrifugal force. I don't see this as being an effect that depends on the choice of coordinate frame for analysis. Same principle with a centrifugal clutch or a centrifugal governor. However you might analyse these, there is a force pressing outwards that has a mechanical effect. Are you one hundred percent sure about what you have said above? Think about it. I simply can't agree with you. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:B0C8:EC5D:84BA:4D00 (talk) 13:01, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

Thanks for your prompt reply. If you spend some time carefully reading a physics textbook that covers introductory mechanics, and you focus on displacement, velocity and acceleration; and Newton’s laws of motion, we will end up agreeing with each other. When we try to explain some physical phenomenon using our intuition we often fail, showing that intuition is a poor teacher. Dolphin (t) 13:36, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

I don't think that maths needs to come into it at all. And I don't think our intuition is failing us when we observe the phenomenon of centrifugal force having a real physical effect. The non-physics public have usually been aware of centrifugal force since they were children, when they saw somebody swing a bucket of water over their heads and the water not falling out. It seems to me that you have got too distracted by the mathematical analysis, to the extent that you have made yourself believe that centrifugal force as a practical reality is merely a figment of a particular method of mathematical analysis. Before you wrote what you wrote above, I was going to sarcastically suggest that you remove all those references to centrifugal clutches and centrifugal governors etc., just in case the readers might get ideas that conflict with the fictitious narrative which the article seems to be promoting. Anyway, I've said all I can say and so I'll leave you to think about it. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:59EA:8F9E:A7A5:D64F (talk) 16:14, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

We don't need to argue maths or intuition - we could, but we've been down that path before and it rarely helps improve the article. We just need to follow reliable sources. Reliable sources indicate that when we are rigorous in our definition of what is a force (eg, something that appears on the left hand side of Newton's second law), the centrifugal force does not appear in inertial frames. When motion is described in rotating frames/coordinate systems, then it is included in the sum of forces if we want to "bootstrap" of Newton's laws to non-inertial frames. If you have reliable sources that say otherwise, or provide additional insight or commentary not currently found in the article, please share them and help us make this article better. --FyzixFighter (talk) 18:09, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

OK, I see what you are saying now. You are saying that centrifugal force doesn't conform to the definition of force as per Newton's laws of motion. And of course, that should be stated in the article. But I've been thinking more about the matter, and I think you are giving undue weight to a scientific definition of force, over the head of the common understanding of the very real phenomenon known as centrifugal force. Look at it this way. A car swerves round a corner at high speed and a passenger gets flung out the back door. We would all agree that this was because of the passenger's tendency to continue in their straight line inertial path. And this tendency caused the passenger to push against the car door, causing the car door to open and the passenger to be thrown out into the road. Now we'll all agree that this tendency was very real. But are we not allowed to call this tendency centrifugal force? What exactly is it that you are claiming is only an illusion in a rotating frame of reference? We can't write off the tendency to be pushed against the door, simply on the grounds that it is only an illusion under a certain kind of mathematical analysis. The effect is very real, and it's now clear to me that this discussion is purely over semantics. It's all about whether or not we are allowed to refer to, what is commonly known as centrifugal force, by its common name. I think we're all agreed that centrifugal force, under the common understanding, arises as a result of inertial motion, and not because of any choice of coordinate frame. But I do see your argument that centrifugal force within the common understanding does not conform with the strictly scientific definition of force as per Newton's laws of motion. I think the common understanding of centrifugal force should come first in the article, followed by the clarification that it is a local term not strictly in line with the definition of force as is used in Newtonian mechanics. I say this, because as the article stands now, it is counter intuitive, giving the impression that what most people see as a real effect with a familiar name, can be made to become an illusion by mathematicians operating in a rotating frame of reference. Those devices listed in the introduction really do operate by centrifugal force under the common understanding. You cannot write that fact off by insisting that it doesn't conform to a strict scientific definition of force. The issue is semantics, not physics. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:797D:908D:F9D2:B75A (talk) 20:15, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

And one final comment. The issue of contention lies totally with the fact that a centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. But its physical effect in a rotating space station for the purpose of simulating weight, is identical to that of the force of gravity. Therefore it's more accurate to state that centrifugal force is a force in a different category of forces than Newtonian forces. It's a bit like that a lion and a tiger are both cats, but a lion isn't a tiger. A Newtonian force and a centrifugal force are both forces, but a centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. I can't get this idea of writing centrifugal force off completely, as an illusion in a rotating frame, just because it isn't a Newtonian force. In fact, more accurately a centrifugal force is an inertial force, independent of whatever mathematical way we analyse it. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:10E3:814:D19C:C3B (talk) 23:03, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
Hence the article we have on this other category of forces, Fictitious force, which you will find is linked in the opening sentence of the article by one of its other names, 'Inertial force'. No changes appear to be needed to the article. MrOllie (talk) 23:15, 15 December 2023 (UTC)
You have written “A car swerves round a corner at high speed and a passenger gets flung out the back door. ... ...” This is a useful example and it is worth examining in further detail.
The car and its occupants are all travelling in a straight line at constant speed so the net force acting on each one is zero. The car then swerves and the passenger is ejected from the car and continues in a straight line at constant speed, at least for a short time. As the passenger is leaving the car a centrifugal force is acting on this unfortunate person. Once clear of the vehicle, the centrifugal force acting on the passenger falls to zero again. You are suggesting that the commencement of the centrifugal force, its magnitude, direction and duration are not determined by the trajectory of the passenger, but by the trajectory of the car. That is not consistent with Newton’s second law. Dolphin (t) 01:37, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Mr. Ollie. The first sentence in this article confuses the issue. We're agreed that centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. Therefore we need to remove the bit where it says "in Newtonian mechanics". The next bit where it says that centrifugal force is an inertial force is fine. But then it immediately delves into the issue that I first raised. Just because it is an inertial force doesn't mean that it is an illusion only observed in a rotating frame of reference. It's no illusion that centrifugal force can be used to simulate the weight of gravity in a rotating space station. I thought we had it all sorted when you correctly drew my attention to the fact that centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force. But it seems that you still think it is an illusion, dependent on choice of coordinate frame. This is clearly not the case. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:F0EB:BBD8:6848:CEA1 (talk) 23:39, 15 December 2023 (UTC)

The only one who has used the word 'illusion' is you. MrOllie (talk) 00:00, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Mr. Ollie. It says in the first sentence, "appears to act on all objects when viewed in a rotating frame of reference". I interpret that as stating that it is only an illusion. But we know that it is not an illusion. It may not be a Newtonian force, but it is still a force, and it can have the same physical effect as a Newtonian force, as per the example I gave of weight being caused by rotation in a space station. I suggest that the introduction runs through the following key points,

     ″When an object is forced to rotate in a rotating system, a centrifugal force draws it away from the centre of rotation, due to the tendency of the object to continue along its uniform straight line inertial path. Centrifugal force is therefore an inertial force and not a Newtonian force, as the latter kind is not involved in uniform straight line motion. Centrifugal force is often analysed in a frame of reference that rotates with the rotating system″

In fact, that's about all there is to it. It's not a very extensive topic. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:8D8F:9CE:B079:7FFD (talk) 00:28, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

The "Appears to act" version is correct. Your suggestion is incorrect because it leaves out crucial information. If an observer is outside of the rotating system, they will not observe any such force - that is what distinguishes a fictitious force. It only 'appears' when the observer (that is, the frame of reference) is undergoing acceleration (in this case as rotation). MrOllie (talk) 00:42, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
(after ec) As MrOllie points out, that definition is incorrect and not supported by reliable sources. An object does not need to be forced to rotate in a rotating system for the centrifugal force to act on it. In the inertial frame there is no force that is pushing the passenger into the wall of the car or pushing astronauts against the floor in a spinning space station. Our intuition that there is one is due to our observations being in the non-inertial frame.
The centrifugal force that you mention is as real as the apparent force one feels pulling down when going up in an elevator. In the inertial frame the effects in the car, space station, and elevator are due to inertia and require no new force. In my opinion this is evident when we consider an object that is stationary in the inertial frame - when viewed in a rotating frame, the object appears to be moving in a circle and therefore undergoing centripetal acceleration. In the rotating frame, the centripetal acceleration is attributed to a combination of fictitious/inertial forces - the centrifugal force pointed outward and a Coriolis force pointed inward. The centrifugal force in this situation is the same as what arises for the passenger and astronauts, and appears because the frame has a rotational acceleration relative to the inertial frame. This is what reliable sources say. Again if you have reliable sources that say otherwise or clarify the concept, then please share. --FyzixFighter (talk) 00:59, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Dolphin51, You misrepresented what I said above. I said that when the car swerves, centrifugal force throws the passenger against the door of the car, due to the tendency of the passenger to undergo his uniform straight line inertial path. We were already agreed that this centrifugal force is not a Newtonian force, but it is a force nevertheless. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:BDDC:2E1F:8186:E19E (talk) 09:30, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Mr. Ollie, There is a paragraph in this link about how a centrifugal clutch works. We don't have to be rotating with the clutch in order it observe it working. https://www.lancereal.com/centrifugal-clutch-explained/ And here's another about the centrifugal pump, https://www.northridgepumps.com/article-346_what-is-a-centrifugal-pump You claimed above that we only observe the centrifugal force if we are in a rotating frame. This is obviously not the case. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:BDDC:2E1F:8186:E19E (talk) 09:33, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
Fyzixfighter, If an object in a rotating system doesn't rotate with the system, say due to lack of friction for example, then the object will not move outwards. There will be no centrifugal force. You seem to be totally absorbed in the mathematical analysis from the perspective of a rotating frame of reference, to the neglect of the actual concept of centrifugal force itself. Your example of viewing a stationary object from a rotating frame of reference is a totally unnatural example which turns the whole topic upside down. It was like asking how do children on a roundabout see a stationary child on the ground below the roundabout. The stationary child experiences no centrifugal force, while the ones on the roundabout see the stationary child moving in a circle. Meanwhile you are trying to use maths to account for why the child on the ground experiences no centrifugal force, as in, because it is cancelled by another fictitious force. That is totally inverted logic, well over the top. As regards reliable sources, that would be fine if reliable sources all spoke with a single narrative. But they don't. Reliable sources are a morass of confusion telling many different narratives. Some talk about rotating frames and fictitious forces, some talk about Newton's third law, and some think there has to be circular motion. It won't be possible to taper the article to the correct balance of reliable sources until there is first some evidence of comprehension of the topic on the part of the editors. So, are we first going to try and reason it out using natural reasoning, or are we going to use the canard about reliable sources every time a point is made that undermines the current narrative in the article? What about this source here, https://www.irjet.net/archives/V4/i1/IRJET-V4I1185.pdf ? It says in the abstract that the centrifugal governor works by centrifugal force. It doesn't say that it only works if you are rotating with the apparatus. And by the way, your analogy about the elevator was wrong. When an elevator accelerates upwards, the people feel an upward force coming from the elevator floor. No inertial forces are involved, and the floor exerts an active force on the people. But in the rotating space station, centrifugal force pushes the people against the floor. It's the other way around. 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:BDDC:2E1F:8186:E19E (talk) 09:36, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

We've been down this path multiple times before. The archives are full of lengthy discussions with multiple editors, one in particular (FDT/David Tombe), that led to only marginal improvements in the article and certain editors (eg, FDT/David Tombe) being banned from physics-related articles and discussions. I'm not seeing anything new in this discussion, and in fact it seems to be largely rehashing those previous discussions. As we've fallen into trying to teach each other "correct" physics/semantics, I really don't see any further value in talk page discussion - this isn't a forum or discussion board. Perhaps an RFC or other dispute resolution avenue would be beneficial if you feel that there is a specific improvement needed in the article. --FyzixFighter (talk) 16:19, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Well, if you've been down this path multiple times before, then maybe it's time to take note of the fact that the lead paragraph contains a ridiculous contradiction. On the one hand it lists mechanical devices that operate on the principle of centrifugal force, while on the other hand it claims that centrifugal force is only an illusion seen by those in a rotating frame of reference. I have explained to you, that you have got yourself absorbed in the mathematical analysis of centrifugal force in a rotating frame, at the expense of the concept itself. Just because it is not a Newtonian force doesn't mean that it is not a force. It still pushes and pulls. I have supplied references above that contradict the view that centrifugal force is only an illusion observed from a rotating frame of reference, and so there's not much more that I can do to help. Whatever, the article as it stands, is a total morass of confusion. By the way, I see reference to another article called "reactive centrifugal force". There is no such thing. It's just inertial centrifugal force pushing or pulling against an obstacle. Was that article, by any chance, started up in order to package away out of sight all scenarios that exposed centrifugal force as a frame-independent force? 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:DD04:6DDA:A6E1:F358 (talk) 16:55, 16 December 2023 (UTC)
Was that article, by any chance, started up in order to package away out of sight all scenarios that exposed centrifugal force as a frame-independent force? You will find that launching conspiracy theories will not help your arguments. It seems that we are done here. MrOllie (talk) 16:59, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

Well if I am wrong, then why aren't those examples simply included in this article? Why did they have to be sided off to a separate article? 2A00:23CC:4D80:1101:DD04:6DDA:A6E1:F358 (talk) 17:05, 16 December 2023 (UTC)

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