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Physics 101: Lecture 16 Rotational Kinematics

Physics 101: Lecture 16 Rotational Kinematics. Today’s lecture will cover Textbook Chapter 8. Rotational Kinematics. The motion of a rigid body about a fixed axis is described by using the same concepts as for linear motion (see C&J Chapter 2):

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Physics 101: Lecture 16 Rotational Kinematics

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  1. Physics 101: Lecture 16Rotational Kinematics • Today’s lecture will cover Textbook Chapter 8

  2. Rotational Kinematics • The motion of a rigid body about a fixed axis is described by using the same concepts as for linear motion (see C&J Chapter 2): Displacement (Dq), Velocity (w), Acceleration (a) Angular Displacement: Identify the axis of rotation and choose a line perpendicular to this axis. Observe the motion of a point on this line. How can one define the change of position of this point during rotation about an axis ? Answer: Change of angle the line makes with a reference line: Dq

  3. Angular Displacement • Follow point P on line perpendicular to the rotation axis: t=t0: t=tf: q0=0 qf P reference line -qf counter clockwise clockwise Angular displacement: Dq = qf - q0= qf Dq = -qf SI unit: radian (rad) 1 rad = 360 degrees/(2 p) Dq (in rad) = arc length / radius = s/r

  4. Angular Velocity and Acceleration • With the concept of displacement in place we can now define angular velocity and acceleration to describe the motion of a rigid body rotating about an axis: Average angular velocity = angular displacement/elapsed time wave = Dq / Dt = (qf-q0)/(t-t0) Average angular acceleration = change in velocity /elapsed time aave = Dw /Dt = (wf-w0)/(t-t0)

  5. See text: chapter 8 And for a point at a distance R from the rotation axis: • s = RvT= R aT = R Rotational Kinematics(with comparison to 1-D linear kinematics) Angular Linear v2 = v02 +2 a Dx See Table 8.1

  6. Angular and Tangential Variables • A point on a line perpendicular to the rotation axis at distance R from the rotational axis moves with a tangential speed (t0=0s,q0=0) vT = s/t = q R/t = w R (q in rad and w in rad/s) and an average tangential acceleration aT = (vT0 – vTf)/t = R (w0-wf)/t = a R How does this relate to the case of uniform circular motion we discussed before ? Uniform motion = constant tangential speed and aT = 0 The change of direction of vT, however, results into a centripetal acceleration: ac = vT2/R = w2 R (=constant) Nonuniform motion = increasing/decreasing tangential speed Magnitude of the total acceleration is then given by a = (aT2 + ac2)1/2

  7. CORRECT Conceptual Question you You and a friend are playing on the merry-go-round. You stand at the outer edge of the merry-go-round and your friend stands halfway between the outer edge and the center. Assume the rotation rate of the merry-go-round is constant. Who has the greatest angular velocity? 1. You do2. Your friend does3. Same Since the angular displacement is the same in both cases.

  8. CORRECT you Conceptual Question Who has the greatest tangential velocity? 1. You do2. Your friend does3. Same This is like the example of the "crack-the-whip." The person farthest from the pivot has the hardest job. The skater has to cover more distance than anyone else. To accomplish this, the skater must skate faster to keep the line straight. vT = w R (w is the same but R is larger)

  9. CORRECT you Concept Question Who has the greatest centripetal acceleration? 1. You do2. Your friend does3. Same Things toward the outer edge want to "fly off" more than things toward the middle. Force is greater on you because you want to fly off more. Centripetal acceleration is ac = R w2 and you have the largest radius.

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