In classical mechanics, the central-force problem is to determine the motion of a particle in a single
central potential field. A central force is a force (possibly negative) that points from the particle directly towards a fixed point in space, the center, and whose magnitude only depends on the distance of the object to the center. In a few important cases, the problem can be solved analytically, i.e., in terms of well-studied functions such as
trigonometric functions.
The solution of this problem is important to
classical mechanics, since many naturally occurring forces are central. Examples include gravity and electromagnetism as described by
Newton's law of universal gravitation and
Coulomb's law, respectively. The problem is also important because some more complicated problems in classical physics (such as the
two-body problem with forces along the line connecting the two bodies) can be reduced to a central-force problem. Finally, the solution to the central-force problem often makes a good initial approximation of the true motion, as in calculating the motion of the planets in the
Solar System.
Basics
The essence of the central-force problem is to solve for the
position
Position often refers to:
* Position (geometry), the spatial location (rather than orientation) of an entity
* Position, a job or occupation
Position may also refer to:
Games and recreation
* Position (poker), location relative to the dealer
* ...
r
[Throughout this article, boldface type is used to indicate that quantities such as r and F are vectors, whereas ordinary numbers are written in italics. Briefly, a vector v is a quantity that has a magnitude ''v'' (also written , v, ) and a direction. Vectors are often specified by their components. For example, the ]position vector
In geometry, a position or position vector, also known as location vector or radius vector, is a Euclidean vector that represents the position of a point ''P'' in space in relation to an arbitrary reference origin ''O''. Usually denoted x, r, or s ...
r = (''x'', ''y'') in Cartesian coordinates
A Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular oriented lines, measured in t ...
is described as an ordered pair of its ''x'' and ''y'' coordinates. of a particle moving under the influence of a
central force F, either as a function of time ''t'' or as a function of the angle φ relative to the center of force and an arbitrary axis.
Definition of a central force

A conservative central force F has two defining properties. First, it must drive particles either directly towards or directly away from a fixed point in space, the center of force, which is often labeled O. In other words, a central force must act along the line joining O with the present position of the particle. Second, a conservative central force depends only on the distance ''r'' between O and the moving particle; it does not depend explicitly on time or other descriptors of position.
This two-fold definition may be expressed mathematically as follows. The center of force O can be chosen as the
origin of a coordinate system. The vector r joining O to the present position of the particle is known as the
position vector
In geometry, a position or position vector, also known as location vector or radius vector, is a Euclidean vector that represents the position of a point ''P'' in space in relation to an arbitrary reference origin ''O''. Usually denoted x, r, or s ...
. Therefore, a central force must have the mathematical form
where ''r'' is the vector magnitude , r, (the distance to the center of force) and r̂ = r/r is the corresponding
unit vector. According to
Newton's second law of motion
Newton's laws of motion are three basic laws of classical mechanics that describe the relationship between the motion of an object and the forces acting on it. These laws can be paraphrased as follows:
# A body remains at rest, or in motion ...
, the central force F generates a parallel acceleration a scaled by the mass ''m'' of the particle
[In this article, Newton's notation for derivatives ("dot notation") is used sometimes to make the formulae easier to read; it has no other significance. In this notation, a single dot over a variable signifies its first derivative with respect to time, e.g.,
Similarly, a double dot over a variable signifies its second derivative with respect for time, e.g.,
]
For attractive forces, ''F''(''r'') is negative, because it works to reduce the distance ''r'' to the center. Conversely, for repulsive forces, ''F''(''r'') is positive.
Potential energy
If the central force is a
conservative force, then the magnitude ''F''(''r'') of a central force can always be expressed as the derivative of a time-independent
potential energy
In physics, potential energy is the energy held by an object because of its position relative to other objects, stresses within itself, its electric charge, or other factors.
Common types of potential energy include the gravitational potentia ...
function ''U''(''r'')
Thus, the total energy of the particle—the sum of its
kinetic energy and its
potential energy
In physics, potential energy is the energy held by an object because of its position relative to other objects, stresses within itself, its electric charge, or other factors.
Common types of potential energy include the gravitational potentia ...
''U''—is a constant; energy is said to be
conserved. To show this, it suffices that the
work ''W'' done by the force depends only on initial and final positions, not on the path taken between them.
Equivalently, it suffices that the
curl
cURL (pronounced like "curl", UK: , US: ) is a computer software project providing a library (libcurl) and command-line tool (curl) for transferring data using various network protocols. The name stands for "Client URL".
History
cURL was fi ...
of the force field F is zero; using
the formula for the curl in spherical coordinates,
because the
partial derivative
In mathematics, a partial derivative of a function of several variables is its derivative with respect to one of those variables, with the others held constant (as opposed to the total derivative, in which all variables are allowed to vary). Part ...
s are zero for a central force; the magnitude ''F'' does not depend on the angular
spherical coordinates θ and φ.
Since the
scalar potential ''V''(''r'') depends only on the distance ''r'' to the origin, it has
spherical symmetry. In this respect, the central-force problem is analogous to the
Schwarzschild geodesics in
general relativity and to the
quantum mechanical treatments of
particles in potentials of spherical symmetry.
One-dimensional problem
If the initial velocity v of the particle is aligned with position vector r, then the motion remains forever on the line defined by r. This follows because the force—and by Newton's second law, also the acceleration a—is also aligned with r. To determine this motion, it suffices to solve the equation
One solution method is to use the conservation of total energy
Taking the reciprocal and integrating we get:
For the remainder of the article, it is assumed that the initial velocity v of the particle is not aligned with position vector r, i.e., that the
angular momentum vector L = r × ''m'' v is not zero.
Uniform circular motion
Every central force can produce uniform circular motion, provided that the initial radius ''r'' and speed ''v'' satisfy the equation for the
centripetal force
A centripetal force (from Latin ''centrum'', "center" and ''petere'', "to seek") is a force that makes a body follow a curved path. Its direction is always orthogonal to the motion of the body and towards the fixed point of the instantaneous c ...
If this equation is satisfied at the initial moments, it will be satisfied at all later times; the particle will continue to move in a circle of radius ''r'' at speed ''v'' forever.
Relation to the classical two-body problem

The central-force problem concerns an ideal situation (a "one-body problem") in which a single particle is attracted or repelled from an immovable point O, the center of force. However, physical forces are generally between two bodies; and by Newton's third law, if the first body applies a force on the second, the second body applies an equal and opposite force on the first. Therefore, both bodies are accelerated if a force is present between them; there is no perfectly immovable center of force. However, if one body is overwhelmingly more massive than the other, its acceleration relative to the other may be neglected; the center of the more massive body may be treated as approximately fixed. For example, the Sun is overwhelmingly more massive than the planet Mercury; hence, the Sun may be approximated as an immovable center of force, reducing the problem to the motion of Mercury in response to the force applied by the Sun. In reality, however, the Sun also moves (albeit only slightly) in response to the force applied by the planet Mercury.

Such approximations are unnecessary, however. Newton's laws of motion allow any classical two-body problem to be converted into a corresponding exact one-body problem. To demonstrate this, let x
1 and x
2 be the positions of the two particles, and let r = x
1 − x
2 be their relative position. Then, by Newton's second law,
The final equation derives from
Newton's third law; the force of the second body on the first body (F
21) is equal and opposite to the force of the first body on the second (F
12). Thus, the equation of motion for r can be written in the form
where
is the
reduced mass
As a special case, the problem of two bodies interacting by a
central force can be reduced to a central-force problem of one body.
Qualitative properties
Planar motion

The motion of a particle under a central force F always remains in the plane defined by its initial position and velocity. This may be seen by symmetry. Since the position r, velocity v and force F all lie in the same plane, there is never an acceleration perpendicular to that plane, because that would break the symmetry between "above" the plane and "below" the plane.
To demonstrate this mathematically, it suffices to show that the
angular momentum of the particle is constant. This
angular momentum L is defined by the equation
where ''m'' is the mass of the particle and p is its
linear momentum.
[Here, the times symbol × indicates the vector cross product, not simple multiplication.] Therefore, the angular momentum vector L is always perpendicular to the plane defined by the particle's position vector r and velocity vector v.
[If a and b are three-dimensional vectors, their vector cross product c = a × b is always perpendicular to the plane defined by a and b.]
In general, the rate of change of the angular momentum L equals the net torque r × F
The first term ''m'' v × v is always zero, because the vector
cross product
In mathematics, the cross product or vector product (occasionally directed area product, to emphasize its geometric significance) is a binary operation on two vectors in a three-dimensional oriented Euclidean vector space (named here E), and is ...
is always zero for any two vectors pointing in the same or opposite directions. However, when F is a central force, the remaining term r × F is also zero because the vectors r and F point in the same or opposite directions. Therefore, the angular momentum vector L is constant. Then
Consequently, the particle's position r (and hence velocity v) always lies in a plane perpendicular to L.
[Goldstein, p. 72.]
Polar coordinates

Since the motion is planar and the force radial, it is customary to switch to
polar coordinates.
In these coordinates, the position vector r is represented in terms of the radial distance ''r'' and the azimuthal angle ''φ''.
Taking the first derivative with respect to time yields the particle's velocity vector v
Similarly, the second derivative of the particle's position r equals its acceleration a
The velocity v and acceleration a can be expressed in terms of the radial and azimuthal unit vectors. The radial unit vector is obtained by dividing the position vector r by its magnitude ''r'', as described above
The azimuthal unit vector is given by
[This formula for the azimuthal unit vector may be verified by calculation; its magnitude equals one
and its dot-product with r equals zero
Therefore, it is a unit vector perpendicular to the radial vector r.]
Thus, the velocity can be written as
whereas the acceleration equals
Specific angular momentum

Since F = ma by Newton's second law of motion and since F is a central force, then only the radial component of the acceleration a can be non-zero; the angular component ''a''
φ must be zero
Therefore,
This expression in parentheses is usually denoted ''h''
which equals the
speed ''v'' times ''r''
⊥, the component of the radius vector perpendicular to the velocity. ''h'' is the magnitude of the
specific angular momentum because it equals the magnitude ''L'' of the angular momentum divided by the mass ''m'' of the particle.
For brevity, the angular speed is sometimes written ''ω''
However, it should not be assumed that ω is constant. Since ''h'' is constant, ω varies with the radius ''r'' according to the formula
Since ''h'' is constant and ''r''
2 is positive, the angle ''φ'' changes monotonically in any central-force problem, either continuously increasing (''h'' positive) or continuously decreasing (''h'' negative).
Constant areal velocity

The magnitude of ''h'' also equals twice the
areal velocity
In classical mechanics, areal velocity (also called sector velocity or sectorial velocity) is a pseudovector whose length equals the rate of change at which area is swept out by a particle as it moves along a curve. In the adjoining figure, supp ...
, which is the rate at which area is being swept out by the particle relative to the center. Thus, the areal velocity is constant for a particle acted upon by any type of central force; this is
Kepler's second law
In astronomy, Kepler's laws of planetary motion, published by Johannes Kepler between 1609 and 1619, describe the orbits of planets around the Sun. The laws modified the heliocentric theory of Nicolaus Copernicus, replacing its circular orbits ...
. Conversely, if the motion under a conservative force F is planar and has constant areal velocity for all initial conditions of the radius r and velocity v, then the azimuthal acceleration ''a''
φ is always zero. Hence, by Newton's second law, F = ''m''a, the force is a central force.
The constancy of areal velocity may be illustrated by uniform circular and linear motion. In uniform circular motion, the particle moves with constant speed ''v'' around the circumference of a circle of radius ''r''. Since the angular velocity ω = ''v''/''r'' is constant, the area swept out in a time Δ''t'' equals ω ''r''
2Δ''t''; hence, equal areas are swept out in equal times Δ''t''. In uniform linear motion (i.e., motion in the absence of a force, by Newton's first law of motion), the particle moves with constant velocity, that is, with constant speed ''v'' along a line. In a time Δ''t'', the particle sweeps out an area ''v''Δ''tr''
⊥ (the
impact parameter).
[The area of a triangle equals one half the base times its height. In this case, the base is given by ''v''Δ''t'' and the height equals the impact parameter ''r''⊥.] The distance ''r''
⊥ does not change as the particle moves along the line; it represents the distance of closest approach of the line to the center O (the
impact parameter). Since the speed ''v'' is likewise unchanging, the areal velocity ''vr''
⊥ is a constant of motion; the particle sweeps out equal areas in equal times.
Equivalent parallel force field
By a transformation of variables, any central-force problem can be converted into an equivalent parallel-force problem.
[A parallel-force problem is one in which the force is exactly zero along one direction.] In place of the ordinary ''x'' and ''y'' Cartesian coordinates, two new position variables ξ = ''x''/''y'' and η = 1/''y'' are defined, as is a new time coordinate ''τ''
The corresponding equations of motion for ''ξ'' and ''η'' are given by
Since the rate of change of ''ξ'' is constant, its second derivative is zero
Since this is the acceleration in the ''ξ'' direction and since ''F''=''ma'' by Newton's second law, it follows that the force in the ''ξ'' direction is zero. Hence the force is only along the ''η'' direction, which is the criterion for a parallel-force problem. Explicitly, the acceleration in the ''η'' direction equals
because the acceleration in the ''y''-direction equals
Here, ''F''
''y'' denotes the ''y''-component of the central force, and ''y''/''r'' equals the cosine of the angle between the ''y''-axis and the radial vector r.
General solution
Binet equation
Since a central force F acts only along the radius, only the radial component of the acceleration is nonzero. By Newton's second law of motion, the magnitude of F equals the mass ''m'' of the particle times the magnitude of its radial acceleration
This equation has integration factor
Integrating yields