this post was submitted on 27 May 2025
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Changing direction is not acceleration. You also experience inertia when changing directions.
Your lateral velocity is changing. Change in velocity = acceleration. In fact, you’re now traveling in a circle, which requires constant acceleration towards the center.
Changing direction by definition is an acceleration. If it wasn't, then all our math about planets, rockets getting to planets, etc, would be wrong.
A steering wheel could be called a "centripetal accelerator", since it induces acceleration toward the center of a radius/circle.
This is high school level physics, one of the first things you learn.
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/centripetal-acceleration/
Face it, planets are hanging from the celestial ceiling - on wires. Galilei's herecy has been debunked. The end is nigh! Eat more sawdust! Ahoohaa!
Yeah I think the guy above you has an argument though. The steering wheel only acts as an accelerator if the vehicle is actually in motion. But then the brake also does that, so maybe there is a point in naming them differently.
Lemme break it down for ya:
You need to revisit the concept of centripetal acceleration. You are remembering incorrectly. Any change in the velocity vector is acceleration. That can be magnitude and/or direction.