The Roller Coaster or Brachistochrone Problem

A roller coaster ride begins with an engine hauling a
train of cars up to the top of a steep grade and releasing them.
From this point on the train is powered by gravity alone and the
ride can be analysed by using the fact that as the train drops in
elevation its
potential energy is
converted into
kinetic energy
.
It is not too hard to derive a formula for the time
t
required for a ride along any curve
y =
y (
x ) that the roller coaster track takes.
Click here to see the details of the
analysis . The result is the following formula:
Once the curve
y (
x ) for the
roller coaster track is given, it and its derivative
y'
(
x ) can be substituted into this formula and the
integration can (hopefully) be carried out. (If the integration
can't be done analytically then at least it can be done
numerically.)
Brachistochrone is Greek for "shortest time".
The brachistochrone problem is to find the curve of the roller
coaster's track that will yield the shortest possible time for
the ride. This problem was originally posed as a challenge to
other mathematicians by John Bernoulli in 1696.
Although we won't prove it, the curve of shortest time is a
cycloid , which also happens to be the curve
traced out by a point on the rim of a wheel as the wheel rotates.
Here is a picture of a cycloid traced this way. The wheel is
shown in blue and the cycloid is shown in red.

measures the
angle through which the wheel has rotated in radians. The
parametric equations for the
x and
y
coordinates of the cycloid in terms of

are also
shown:
If we take one-half of a cycloid and turn it upside-down we get
the brachistochrone for the roller coaster:
Notice that it is vertical at the start to get up lots of initial
speed and then flattens out at the end. This path has another
interesting property, namely if the ride could somehow be started
from rest at point
B or
C , the ride would last
the same length of time as if it started from point
A
.
Written by Eric Hiob ,
Sunday, December 22, 1996 - 4:54:20 PM