Inertial_force Inertial_force

Inertial force - Definition and Overview

Inertia is the tendency of any state of affairs to persist in the absence of external influences. Specifically, in physics, it is the tendency of a body to maintain its state of uniform motion unless acted on by an external force. (This is called Newton's first law of motion, taken from Galileo's principle.) The term is also used in psychology to describe a persons resistance to change.

Contents

History

The concept of inertia is alien to the physics of Aristotle which provided the standard account of motion until the 17th century. Aristotle, and his peripatetic followers, held that a body was only maintained in motion by the action of a continuous external force. Thus, in the Aristotelian view, a projectile moving through the air would owe its continuing motion to eddies or vibrations in the surrounding medium, a phenomenon known as antiperistasis. In the absence of a proximate force, the body would come to rest immediately.

In the 6th century, Joannes Philoponus first criticised Aristotle's notion and proposed that motion was maintained by some property of the body, imparted when it was set in motion.

This view was strongly opposed by Averroës and the scholastic philosophers who supported Aristotle. William of Occam argued forcibly for Philoponus's theory but supporters still held the view that the property which maintained the motion also dissipated as it moved.

In the 14th century, Jean Buridan named the motion-maintaining property impetus and rejected the view that it dissipated spontaneously, asserting that a body would be arrested by the forces of air resistance and gravity which might be opposing its impetus. Buridan further held that the impetus of a body increased with the speed with which it was set in motion, and with its quantity of matter. Clearly, Buridan's impetus is closely related to the modern concept of momentum. Buridan anticipated Isaac Newton when he wrote:

...after leaving the arm of the thrower, the projectile would be moved by an impetus given to it by the thrower and would continue to be moved as long as the impetus remained stronger than the resistance, and would be of infinite duration were it not diminished and corrupted by a contrary force resisting it or by something inclining it to a contrary motion

Buridan used the theory of impetus to give an accurate qualitative account of the motion of projectiles but he ultimately saw his theory as a correction to Aristotle, maintaining core peripatetic beliefs including a fundamental qualitative difference between motion and rest.

The theory of impetus was adapted to explain celestial phenomena in terms of circular impetus. Leonardo da Vinci, mistakenly, wrote Everything moveable thrown with fury through the air continues the motion of its mover; if, therefore, the latter move in a circle and release it in the course of this motion, its movement will be curved.

Sometime between 1589 and 1592, Galileo Galilei started researching the motion of moving bodies using the impetus theory of Hipparchus. Following an audacious series of experiments, both in practice and in thought, Galileo came to reject the Aristotelian view and to formulate a new principle of inertia, sometimes known as Galileo's principle:

Every object persists in its state of rest, or uniform motion (in a straight line); unless, it is compelled to change that state, by forces impressed on it.

In the summer of 1954, a student and future Nobel Prize winner observed a reproducible perturbation of the laws of inertia and Einstein's "Theory of Relativity" associated with the alignment of the earth, moon, and sun during an eclipse. Maurice Allais' observations have since been reproduced with enough confidence to satisfy some scientists.

Newtonian mechanics

Newton adopted Galileo's principle as his first law of motion and set it within the wider context of what came to be known as Newtonian physics. In Newton's theory, no force is required to maintain a body in uniform motion, in contrast to Aristotle's view, where no force is needed to maintain a body at rest. The impetus of a body was the cause of motion but its Newtonian equivalent, momentum is simply descriptive, no cause being required.

The loss of the ontological distinction between rest and motion leads to the concept of inertial frames which demand that observers in uniform (non-accelerating) motion all observe the same laws of physics. Observers in distinct inertial frames can make a very simple, and intuitively obvious, transformation (the Galilean transformation, a linear, sliding translation at constant velocity) to convert their observations for another's observations. Thus, an observer on a moving train sees a dropped ball fall vertically downwards, as does an observer of a similar ball in a stationary frame. The relationship holds because, on the train, which is moving at a constant velocity, the ball also has an inertia in the direction of travel that maintains its relative position, with respect to the moving train, when the ball is dropped.

However, in non-inertial frames, accelerating observers encounter all sorts of fictitious forces, such as the Coriolis force, that would not be experienced in an inertial frame of reference (such as the frame of the "fixed stars" like Polaris).

In summary, the principle of inertia is intimately linked with the principles of conservation of energy and conservation of momentum. Thus a change in momentum or energy would have to be applied to the observer or to the system in a conversion of the viewpoint from an inertial frame to some non-inertial frame.

Measuring Inertia

The unit of measure for inertia is the same as for mass. Typically it is expressed in grams or kilograms.

The equivalence of mass and inertia seems to hold true according to all empirical evidence (see gravitational physics and also Mach's principle, below). In theory at least they are sometimes regarded as being separate qualities.

Mach's principle

In the 18th century, English philosopher George Berkeley proposed that motion should be categorised as uniform or non-uniform against a frame fixed with respect to the distant stars. Independently, in 1893, Ernst Mach, motivated by his phenomenalist philosophy, proposed the principle that:

The inertia of any system is the result of the interaction of that system and the rest of the universe. In other words, every particle in the universe ultimately has an effect on every other particle.

Albert Einstein named this Mach's principle. He was attracted to its suggestion that there was no need of an absolute, unique or special frame of reference against which claims of rest or motion would be judged. Though Galileo and Newton had apparently eliminated the distinction in the 17th century, by the late 19th century it had re-asserted itself in the form of the luminiferous aether, a mysterious medium conjured to support the new discoveries in electromagnetism. Einstein drew on Mach's principle in his original development of special relativity but then abandoned it as unnecessary. Later, Einstein fiercely re-asserted the equivalence of all inertial frames and showed that, once combined with the principle of the constancy of the speed of light, it led to satisfactory explanations of many surprising physical phenomena.

"Inertia" in non-mechanical systems

In mathematical descriptions of mechanical systems, the mass of a body appears in a term featuring the acceleration, the second derivative of displacement; as, for example, in the harmonic oscillator. It is this term that provides the dynamics of the system in that, if we vary the system slowly enough we can make the term small and the system behaves quasi-statically. It is the interaction between the inertial term (involving the second derivative of displacement) and some restoring force (involving the zeroth derivative of displacement) that allows a system to oscillate.

There are other physical phenomena which exhibit similar behaviour and which are also described by second-order differential equations.

  • In these systems, the multiplier of the second derivative term plays a role analogous to mass in a mechanical system: in particular, inductance in loaded electrical systems and inertance in acoustical systems.
  • Importantly, there is no thermal analogue of inertia entailing that there are no un-driven thermal oscillations.

Rotary inertia

A further analogy is that of rotational inertia in which a rotating body maintains its state of uniform rotational motion. Thus its angular momentum would be unchanged, unless an external torque were to be applied. Rotational inertia often has hidden practical consequences. In the braking of a railway train, arresting the linear motion would require that the substantial rotational inertia of the motors must be converted to some other forms of energy, thus causing acoustic vibration of the wheels and frictional heating of the brakes on the railway carriage.

Intuitive physics

Commonly, when people unschooled in Newtonian physics are asked to make predictions about certain sorts of motions involving inertia, their responses are more likely to reflect the theories of Aristotle than of Newton.

For example, they often do not realise that the hammer or steel ball in the hammer throw continues in a straight line.

See also

Energy | General relativity | Inertial frame | Inertial guidance system | Inertial mass | Mach's principle | Momentum | Newton's laws of motion | Newtonian physics | Special relativity

External links

Books and papers

  • Butterfield, H (1957) The Origins of Modern Science ISBN 071350160X
  • Clement, J (1982) "Students' preconceptions in introductory mechanics", American Journal of Physics vol 50, pp66-71
  • Crombie, A C (1959) Medieval and Early Modern Science, vol 2
  • McCloskey, M (1983) "Intuitive physics", Scientific American, April, pp114-123
  • McCloskey, M & Carmazza, A (1980) "Curvilinear motion in the absence of external forces: naïve beliefs about the motion of objects", Science vol 210, pp1139-1141


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