- For the waltz composed by Johann Strauss, see Accelerationen.
In kinematics, acceleration is defined as the first derivative of velocity with respect to time (that is, the rate of change of velocity), or equivalently as the second derivative of position. It is a vector quantity with dimension L T−2. In SI units, acceleration is measured in metres per second squared (m/s2).
In common speech, the term acceleration is only used for an increase in speed (the magnitude of velocity); a decrease in speed is called deceleration. In physics, any increase or decrease in speed is referred to as acceleration, and also a change in the direction of velocity is an acceleration (the centripetal acceleration; whereas the rate of change of speed is the tangential acceleration).
In classical mechanics, the acceleration of a body is proportional to the resultant (total) force acting on it (Newton's second law):
where
F is the resultant force acting on the body,
m is the
mass of the body, and
a is its acceleration.
Tangential and centripetal acceleration
The acceleration of a particle can be written as:
where
ut and
un are (respectively) the unit
tangent vector and the unit
normal vector to the particle's trajectory, and
R is its radius of
curvature. These components are called the
tangential acceleration and the
centripetal acceleration, respectively.
Relation to relativity
After completing his theory of
special relativity,
Albert Einstein realized that forces felt by objects undergoing constant
proper acceleration are indistinguishable from those in a gravitational field. This was the basis for his development of
general relativity, a relativistic theory of
gravity. This is also the basis for the popular
twin paradox, which asks why one twin ages less when moving away from his sibling at near light-speed and then returning, since the non-aging twin can say that it is the other twin that was moving.
General relativity solved the "why does only one object feel accelerated?" problem which had plagued philosophers and scientists since Newton's time (and caused Newton to endorse absolute space). In
special relativity, only
inertial frames of reference (non-accelerated frames) can be used and are equivalent;
general relativity considers
all frames, even accelerated ones, to be equivalent. (The path from these considerations to the full theory of general relativity is traced in the
introduction to general relativity.)
See also
External links