Give Me Some Examples Of Centrifuge Machines?

i would like to have answers in the form of examples,diagram,equation,and explanation about centrifuge machines and also about centrifugal and centripetal forces

3 Comments zu “Give Me Some Examples Of Centrifuge Machines?”

  1. Milly (UK)

    Centripetal vs. Centrifugal Forces
    name Giselle R.
    status educator
    age 20s
    Question – What is centrifugal force? Is it a real force? Could
    you give us a simple explanation and some examples of centrifugal force
    so that my elementary students will understand this concept? Thank you,
    Miss R.
    Additionally:
    Thank you very much for responding to our question about centripetal force.
    We will be trying the experiment. We have one more related question. What
    then is centrifugal force? and What is the difference between centripetal
    and centrifugal forces?
    ————————————–…
    Giselle,
    Centrifugal force is a virtual force. It is not really a force. There are
    some situations you can be in that have you accelerating without speeding
    up. One of these is a carnival ride that spins around in a circle at a
    constant speed. I know one where you feel pressed against the wall very
    tightly, and then the floor drops out. Most people would believe they were
    moving steadily, with there bodies being pressed tightly against the wall
    (outward, in a cetrifugal direction). This is centripetal force. This is
    not really what happens.
    When moving fast, a great deal of force is required to make you change
    direction. Your body “wants” to continue in a straight line. The curved
    wall gets in the way. The wall pushes in against your body. The “outward
    force” is just your body trying to move in a straight line. It is not a
    force at all. It is inertia, your body resisting the effects of the forces
    it feels.
    Virtual forces exist when your body is accelerating. Objects moving in a
    steady direction at a steady speed appear to accelerate, as you see them.
    Place a ball on a car seat while moving at a steady speed. Have the driver
    slam on the brakes. Observe the ball appear to be pushed forward and off
    the seat. The ball just continued to move forward. It is the car that felt
    the backward force of the brakes. Hang a heavy ball from a spring in an
    elevator. As the elevator begins to rise, the ball begins to move, as if
    someone pushed down on it. It is the ball just “trying” to stay still as
    the elevator accelerates upward. While rising, you can stop the motion. It
    will start again when the elevator stops. The faster the acceleration (the
    more you can “feel” it in your body), the stronger the virtual forces appear
    to be.
    Dr. Ken Mellendorf
    Illinois Central College
    ======================================…
    When the trajectory of an object travels on a closed path about a point –
    either circular or elliptical — it does so because there is a force pulling
    the object in the direction of that point. That force is defined as the
    CENTRIPETAL force. It has not been more simply, or directly stated than by
    one Isaac Newton in his famous “Principia” (definition 5):
    “A centripetal force is that by which bodies are drawn or impelled, or any
    way tend, towards a point as to a center.”
    This force can be demonstrated by twirling a ball on a string, and either
    actually or conceptually cutting the string. The ball’s trajectory is then a
    straight line tangential to the closed trajectory at the instant the string
    is cut. This is also illustrated by what happens to the ball in the “hammer
    throw” of track and field. The athlete spins the heavy ball around several
    times then lets it fly. It takes off in a straight line (not quite, because
    the hammer is actually not spun parallel to the ground, but that is not
    relevant).
    That is really all that is necessary. The term CENRTIFUGAL force appears to
    have come about because of a mistaken perception that there is a force that
    operates in the opposite direction as the CENTRIPETAL force. But that is a
    misconception. The “pull” that is felt by the ball on a string or by the
    hammer thrower is the force that has to be applied toward the center, to
    keep the ball from flying off tangentially, not radially.
    Unfortunately, the terms are often used interchangably, or incorrectly.
    Newton’s term, which I think should take the prize is CENTRIPETAL.
    Vince Calder



  2. Rick Blaine

    The simplest one is a Salad spinner i.e. the device used to dry salad vegetables after you wash them



  3. robellis

    Your washing machine.