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Cycloidal motion

Suppose you have a reflector mounted right at the rim of a bicycle wheel. If you hold the wheel up in the air and spin it, the reflector traces out a circular path. The equation describing the position is as a function of time is give by eq. 5.7. But when a camel is riding the bicycle, the wheel is on the ground so that the center of the wheel is moving. We'll see in a month or so that the velocity of the center of the wheel is tex2html_wrap_inline1992 . That implies that the the position of the center of the wheel as a function of time is tex2html_wrap_inline1994 . So from equation 5.22 we have that the position of this reflector relative to the ground is the sum of two terms. The position of the reflector relative to the center of the wheel, plus the position of the center of the wheel relative to the ground:

equation534

This traces out a ``cycloid'' as shown in the figure below. Notice the series of cusps that occur when the reflector is close to the ground. When you look at a bicyclist at night, if they're being good and have reflectors on their wheels, you should be able to see these cycloidal trajectories.

figure536



Joshua Deutsch
Mon Jan 6 00:05:26 PST 1997