Let's consider I have a particle moving on the x,y plane. On this particle acts the Lorentz force, however it does not necessary perform a rotation by the axes origin (x,y)=(0,0). I would like to re-write the Lorentz force in the "global" cylindrical coordinate system where the origin (x,y)=(0,0) is the same as the r=0. Of course the particle motion will be described by R=r,ϕ,z and u=u_r,u_ϕ,u_z in that coordinate system. Should I add an inertial force in this system, such as mdudt=FL+Fint, in my description?

link223mh

link223mh

Answered question

2022-10-19

Let's consider I have a particle moving on the x,y plane. On this particle acts the Lorentz force, however it does not necessary perform a rotation by the axes origin ( x , y ) = ( 0 , 0 ) . I would like to re-write the Lorentz force in the "global" cylindrical coordinate system where the origin ( x , y ) = ( 0 , 0 ) is the same as the r=0. Of course the particle motion will be described by R = r , ϕ , z and u = u r , u ϕ , u z in that coordinate system. Should I add an inertial force in this system, such as m d u d t = F L + F i n t , in my description?

Answer & Explanation

Gael Irwin

Gael Irwin

Beginner2022-10-20Added 13 answers

First you write the equations of motion in Inertial system R = [ x , y ] T
(1) m R ¨ = F L ( R , R ˙ , t , q ¯ )
F L is the Lorentz force and q ¯ the electric charge
now you can transformed equation (1) to polar coordinates with:\
R ( x , y ) R ( r , ϕ )
R ˙ = R q q ˙
R ¨ = R q q ¨ + f z ( q , q ˙ )
with: q = [ r , ϕ ] T
equation (1)
(2) m ( R q q ¨ + f z ( q , q ˙ ) ) = F L ( q , q ˙ , t , q ¯ )
multiply equation (2) from the left with J T = ( R q ) T we obtain :
(3) m J T J q ¨ = J T F l m J T f z
Equation (3) are the equations of motion in polar coordiantes

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