How many degrees in one radian? CCW: + A) 1 rad = 2π degrees θ0 = 0 B) 1 rad = 180° CW: C) 1 rad = 10° D) 1 rad = 57.3° E) Radian is not a measure of angle, so the question is nonsense. In 180°: θ = s/r = half of circumference of a circle/radius = πr/r = π radians. Therefore: 1 radian x (180°/π rad) ≈ 57.3°. Note: The arc length of 1 radian is equal to 1 radius. L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 1 Assignments Announcements: • CAPA 11 is now live. HW11 is due next week. • You should read Ch. 10 now. Today: • Continuing with rotational motion, found in Ch. 10. Today rotational kinematics. • On Monday we’ll move on to rotational dynamics. Also we’ll discuss center-of-mass on Monday, found in Ch. 9. L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 2 Rotational Motion position velocity acceleration -- rotation about a fixed axis. As distinct from “translational motion” which we have studied so far. Translational Motion Rotational Motion x (m) v (m/s) = dx/dt a (m/s2) = dv/dt Constant acceleration a: θ (rad) ω (rad/s) = dθ/dt α (rad/s2) = dω/dt Constant angular acceleration α: v = v0 + at ω = ω 0 + αt 1 2 x = x0 + vot + at 2 v 2 = v02 + 2aΔx 1 2 θ = θ 0 + ω ot + α t 2 ω 2 = ω 02 + 2αΔθ L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 3 Rotational Kinematics s = r θ arc-length formula Rotational velocity: Δs dθ ω= dt [ω] = rad/s = s-1 rate of change of the angle θ ω +: CCW ω -: CW L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 4 Rotational Kinematics s = r θ arc-length formula Relating v and ω: Δs v = rω L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture or ds v= dt d = (rθ ) dt dθ =r dt = rω dθ v ω= = dt r tangential velocity (m/s) use arc-length formula r constant for circular motion definition of angular velocity ω Rate at which θ is changing 5 s = rθ v = rω A pocket watch and Big Ben are both keeping perfect time. Which minute hand has the larger angular velocity ω? A) Pocket watch. B) Big Ben. C) Same ω. The angular speed is the same: Δθ complete rotation 2π rad 1hour ω= = = ⋅ = 0.00174rad / s Δt 1hour 1hour 3600s L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 6 s = rθ v = rω A pocket watch and Big Ben are both keeping perfect time. Which minute hand’s tip has the larger tangential velocity v? A) Pocket watch. B) Big Ben. v = rω C) Same v. L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 7 s = rθ v = rω A small wheel and a large wheel are connected by a belt. The small wheel turns at a constant angular velocity ωS. How does the magnitude of the angular velocity of the large wheel ωL compare to that of the small wheel ωS? A) ωS = ωL B) ωS > ωL C) ωS < ωL Check this by experiment. L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 8 s = rθ v = rω A small wheel and a large wheel are connected by a belt. The small wheel turns at a constant angular velocity ωS. There is a bug S on the rim of the small wheel and a bug L on the rim of the big wheel? How do their speeds compare? A) vS = vL B) vS > vL C) vS < vL They both travel with the speed of the belt. L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 9 Rotational Kinematics Δs s = r θ arc-length formula dθ v ω= = dt r angular velocity Units: Note: rpm = 60 f = 60/τ L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture # revolutions 1 rev 1 f = = = (Hz) sec period τ # radians 2π 2π ω= = = = 2π f sec period τ 2π r v = ωr = = 2π rf τ 10 A ladybug is clinging to the rim of a spinning wheel which is spinning CCW and is speeding up. At the moment shown, when the bug is at the far right, what is the approximate direction of the ladybug's acceleration? v2 Δv v1 L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture v2 v1 11 Rotational Kinematics s = r θ arc-length formula Δs ar is due to change in direction of velocity vector v (centripetal accel) atan is due to change in the magnitude (speed) of v 2 | a | = a = atan + ar2 L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture ω= dθ v = dt r Rate at which θ is changing dv tangential acceleration (m/s ) atan = dt d(rω ) use equation for ω = dt dω r constant for circular motion =r dt definition of α = rα dω atan Rate at which ω is α= = changing dt r 2 12 Rotational Kinematics Describing rotational motion angle of rotation (rads) = v 2π = = 2π f r τ angular velocity (rad/s) = atan r angular acceleration (rad/s2) Recall that centripetal acceleration is expressed in terms of tangential velocity as: ar = v2/r. How is it expressed in terms of angular velocity ω? A) ar = ω2/r B) ar = rω C) ar = rω2 D) ar = r2ω2 ar = v2/r = (rω)2/r = rω2 L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 13 Example 1. A vinyl record has radius r = 6 in = 15.2 cm and spins at 33.3 rpm (revolutions per minute). 1. What is its period? A) 33.3 sec B) 3 sec C) 1.8 sec s = r θ dθ v 2π ω= = = = 2π f dt r τ dω atan α= = dt r D) 0.55 sec rev 33.3 → 1 min L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 1 min ⎛ 60 sec ⎞ sec =τ ⎜⎝ ⎟⎠ = 1.8 33.3 rev 1min rev 14 Example 1. A vinyl record has radius r = 6 in = 15.2 cm and spins at 33.3 rpm (revolutions per minute). 1. What is its period? τ = 1.8 sec s = r θ dθ v 2π ω= = = = 2π f dt r τ dω atan α= = dt r 2. What is its frequency? A) 33.3 Hz B) 3 Hz C) 1.8 Hz D) 0.55 Hz 1 f =1/τ = = 0.55 Hz 1.8 sec L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 15 Example 1. A vinyl record has radius r = 6 in = 15.2 cm and spins at 33.3 rpm (revolutions per minute). 1. What is its period? τ = 1.8 sec 2. What is its frequency? f s = r θ dθ v 2π ω= = = = 2π f dt r τ dω atan α= = dt r = 0.55 Hz 3. What is its angular velocity? A) 0.55 Hz B) 3.49 rad/sec C) 1.8 rad/sec D) 0.88 rad/sec ω = 2π f = (2)(3.14)(0.55) rad / sec = 3.49 rad / sec L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 16 Example 1. A vinyl record has radius r = 6 in = 15.2 cm and spins at 33.3 rpm (revolutions per minute). 1. What is its period? τ = 1.8 sec 2. What is its frequency? f s = r θ dθ v 2π ω= = = = 2π f dt r τ dω atan α= = dt r = 0.55 Hz 3. What is it angular velocity? ω = 3.49 rad / sec 4. What is the speed v of a bug on its rim? A) 53 cm/sec B) 3.49 cm/sec C) 4.35 cm/sec D) 8.44 cm/sec v = rω = (15.2cm)(3.49 rad / sec) = 53.0 cm / sec L32 F 11/7/14 a+er lecture 17