It can't be 'centrifugal' since it acts towards the centre of the turning circle, not away from it.Sevulturus wrote:That would be centrifugal. Because it is not something that is truely measurable as it is not a direct force we are told that it does not exactly exist. My point through all of this was not that centrifugal force (or an objects desire to travel in a straight line) is overcome by the lean that is the direct result of application of the bars.SV-wolf wrote:The force of the car door accelerating you to the centre of the turning circle has no particular name as far as I am aware, except that it is the centripetal force transmitted to your body by mechanical forces within the structure of the car.
Moving your body from one side to the other will have the same effect, but it's much slower. And WAY less responsive.
I didn't quite understand your question first time, but I've reread it and the penny has just dropped. This might answer your question.
You can analysie the forces on a materail object in many ways depending on what you wish to achieve. In a relative universe all forces have to be analysed in relation to some fixed point. Two obvious ways are to analyse the forces acting internally within an object, ignoring the relationship of that object to its environment or to analyse the forces acting externally on it from its environment.
If you analyse the external forces acting on a turning car and its passengers, treating them as a single object, then the accelerating force (the centripetal force) has no balancing force. if it had a balancing force, as I said, there would be no resultant force and therefore no turn.
If you analyse the companent forces within a turning car and specifically on two bodies within it, the car body itself and you as passenger, then where you are thrust against the car door, yes there is an equal and opposing force to centripetal force. This is called the Normal force. The force that the car door exerts on you (the centripetal force) is equalled by the Normal force which you exert on the door. This has to be the case because if there were a resulting force between you and the car wall you would accelerate across the car.
But this is viewing the situation locally, ie between two bodies, you and the car. It ignores the relation of the car to the road. As I said, every analysis of forces is relative to some defined point.
So, if you consider the forces both on the car and on the two bodies comprising the car you have as follows: one force P, the centripetal force acting on the car body (as transmitted from the tyres), another equal force P which the car body transmits to you, and a third force - P, this is the normal force which you exert back on the wall of the car. The Normal force has to take a negative sign because forces are vector qunatities which vary according to direction as well as intensity. Add these three forces together: P + P - P and you get a net resultant force of P. This is the resultant centripetal force acting on the system as a whole.
Phew!
If you still believe in the existence of centrifugal force then I suggest you go down to you local bookshop or library and look up any text on mechanics or applied mathematics of High School or Pre-University level which deals with rotational force.