I was given the task to come up with an equation $p(t)$ describing the path of a point on a circle rolling along the x-Axis (with $t$ describing time). The center of the circle has a constant velocity of $(v,0)$. I came up with the following: \begin{equation} p_x(t)=r\cdot\cos\left(\frac{3\pi}{2}-vt\right)+vt =-r\sin(vt)+vt \end{equation} \begin{equation} p_y(t)=r\cdot\sin\left(\frac{3\pi}{2}-vt\right)+r=-r\cos(vt)+r =r(1-\cos(vt)) \end{equation} I was wondering if this is the correct solution. Comparing my solution with the equation of a cycloid I noticed that (in the x-component) instead of adding "$vt$" I should add "$r\cdot vt$" but I can't seem to figure out why.
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If the linear speed of the centre is $v$, and the circle rolls without slipping, then the angular speed $\omega$ of rotation is given by $$v=r\omega$$.
So the angle turned at time $t$ is $\omega t$, while the horizontal displacement of the centre is still $vt$.
Therefore in your trigonometric expressions, you should replace $vt$ with $\omega t$ or $\frac{vt}{r}$, but keep the additional $vt$ part of the $x$ coordinate.
So the final equations are $$x=vt-r\sin\left(\frac{vt}{r}\right)$$ $$y=r\left(1-\cos\left(\frac{vt}{r}\right)\right)$$
David Quinn
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And what's the point of the multiplication in the cycloid equation? (Assuming $t$ is the correct term: $-r\sin(t)+rt$) – Tahunie Nov 02 '21 at 13:30
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@Tahunie I'm not sure what multiplication you are referring to but please see my amended answer. I hope this helps. – David Quinn Nov 02 '21 at 15:17