Yes, but the difference is that it gains a frequency.pequaide wrote:If something is moving in an arc; and you cut the string it will move at the same rate, but in a line. It does not seem a stretch to use the same math for both motions. And if all points are moving clockwise (or all counterclockwise) then they are moving in the same direction.
This view of the universe seems to work; and isn't that what is important.
And things keeps rotating while structural integrity keeps the centripetal force in place: this could be a string, gravity, or just structure itself.
Mass with velocity which is caught by rotation, gets a frequency (or angular velocity) which depends on its radius.
One could say when it does not rotate its radius is immensely large and its frequency is 0.
When parallel moving objects get caught tangent to a center, then the closer it gets the higher the frequency and the higher the angular velocity: w=v/r.
When it hits the center And it rotates then it actually came to a full-stop, with radius 0, and an angular velocity of relativistic proportions *).
But at any radius - on average - it just stopped.
(* Let's not go there, but one can image the conclusion for a whole universe