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PHYSICS 125 Lecture Notes Book 3 Prepared by Kai Wong Table of Contents 11. Work and Energy ………………………………………………………. 2 12. Conservation of Mechanical Energy ……………………………………9 13. Impulse and Momentum ………………………………………………..15 14. Conservation of Momentum …………………………………………….19 15. Kinematics of Rotation …………………………………………………..30 1 11. Work and Energy Definition of Work Consider a force F acting on an object that undergoes a displacement d . There may or may not be other forces acting on the same object, so the displacement is in general not a direct consequence of the force F . The work done by the force is thus defined: Work done by F Component of F along the direction of d magnitude of d Or, in symbols, W Fd d Case 1: F and d are in the same direction. We have Fd F , and so W Fd F d Case 2: F and d are in opposite directions. We have Fd F , and so W F d F d Case 3: F is perpendicular to d . We have Fd 0 , and so W 0 2 F d Case 4: F makes an angle 90 with d . We have Fd F cos , and so W F d cos F d Fd Case 5: F makes an angle 90 with d . We have Fd F cos 180 F cos , because cos 180 cos , and so again W F d cos F 180 d Fd In fact, we can take W F d cos as the definition of work in general, noting that cos 0 1 cos180 1 cos 90 0 The unit of work is N m , and is called J (Joule). Getting a force to do work is often desirable. To move a chair on a rough floor, you need to push. The purpose of the push force is to overcome friction. The push force does 3 positive work because the chair moves in the direction of the push. Note that the work done by the friction force in this case is negative, but is no concern usually. We can also move the chair up by lifting. In this case, the lift force is required to overcome gravity. Again the lift force does positive work. The negative work done by gravity is usually of no concern. Work Energy Theorem Consider the simple case of an object of mass m being pulled by a single force F . Since the motion is one dimensional, Newton’s second law gives the acceleration as a F m Recall the relation between initial velocity, final velocity, and displacement: v 2 v02 2ax which we rewrite as v 2f vi2 2 F x m Since W Fx we can recast the above equation into the form W 1 2 1 2 mv f mvi 2 2 This motivates the definition of kinetic energy as follows: K 1 2 mv 2 We have established in our simple case of one force that Work done Change in kinetic energy Or, W K In general, if there are multiple forces acting on a single object, we need to modify the above to 4 Sum of Work done by all forces Change in kinetic energy W K This is called the Work-energy Theorem. The unit of kinetic energy is also J , the same as for work. Note that kinetic energy is a scalar, and does not depend on the direction of the velocity vector. Kinetic energy can be exploited to do work in the following sense. To reduce the kinetic energy of a moving object to zero, we need to apply a force. The work done by this force is negative according to work-energy theorem because W K 0 . This is also clear when we realize that the direction of this force must be opposing the velocity of the object to cause it to slow down. The reaction of this force acts on whatever agent that applies the force in the opposite direction. This reaction is in the same direction as the displacement, and so does positive work (on the agent). This is the positive work derivable from the kinetic energy of the object. As a concrete example, consider hitting a nail with a hammer. The kinetic energy of the hammer disappears when the hammer is stopped by the nail because the nail exerts a force on the hammer that does negative work. The force exerted by the hammer is a reaction of this force, and it does positive work as the nail is driven into the wall. Displacement of nail Displacement of hammer Work done by gravity Consider an object moving from a point A at a height hi to a point B at a height h f as shown in the diagram. The heights are measured from some reference level. During the displacement, the gravitational attraction on the object (its weight) is a downward force equal to mg in magnitude where m is the mass of the object. The work is Wg mgd cos mg hi h f mghi mgh f Defining the gravitational potential energy of the object at a height h to be U mgh 5 we can write W g U A hi hi-hf mg B hf Since only the difference in U is involved, the choice of the reference level for height measurement is immaterial. In particular, h is negative if the object is below the reference level. In fact, h is a y-coordinate. According to this relation, we can say that gravity taps into potential energy to do work, because in moving from a higher elevation to a lower elevation, there is a reduction of potential energy ( U 0 ), and the work W g U is positive. We can show that the work done by gravity in going from one point to the other is independent of the path followed. To illustrate this, consider taking the path AC and CB to go from A to B, where the point is directly underneath A and at the same level as B as shown. Along the path AC, the work is WAC mghi h f cos 0 mghi h f U Along the path BC, the work is WCB mgCB cos 90 0 Since WAC WCB U , we have WAB WAC WCB A force for which the work done is independent of path is called a conservative force. If the path is a closed loop, the work done by a conservative force would be zero, because 6 among all paths starting from a point and ending in the same point, there is the trivial path involving no movement. For this path, the work is clearly zero. We have seen that for a conservative force, the work done can be calculated as the difference between the potential energies at the starting and the end points, without knowledge of what happens in between. Friction is not a conservative force. To demonstrate, push a block on a rough table forward and then backward to return to the same location. During both the forward and the backward movements, the friction force is in the opposite direction of the displacement, and does negative work in cases. The net work done by friction for the closed path is not zero. Example: A 0.05-kg block slides with constant speed down an incline plane, changing its elevation from 0.8m above the floor to 0.2m. Find the work done by all the forces on the block. Solution: The forces on the object consist of its weight, the normal force, and kinetic friction. FK FN mg 0.8m 0.2m The work done by gravity is Wg U mgh mg h f hi mg hi h f 0.05 10 0.8 0.2 0.3J The work done by the normal force is WFN 0 7 because the force is perpendicular to the displacement. To find the work done by the friction force, we use the work energy theorem, noting that there is no change in kinetic energy K 0 as the object moves with constant speed: W g WFN WFK 0 WFK 0.3J 8 12 Conservation of Mechanical Energy Consider an object of mass m moving entirely under the influence of gravity such as a projectile. The work energy theorem reduces to W g K and leads to U K Or, K U K U 0 Alternatively, we can write Ki Ui K f U f This states that the sum of kinetic and gravitational potential energy remains unchanged in the course of motion. Kinetic and potential energy are collectively known as mechanical energy. We have just demonstrated the law of conversation of mechanical energy. If we consider Gain in kinetic energy K f K i K Loss in potential energy U i U f U we can interprete conservation of energy as saying that the gain in kinetic energy is equal to the loss of potential energy. Gains and losses can be either positive and negative. In the course of motion of the projectile, there is a transformation of mechanical energy from kinetic to potential and vice versa taking place continually without the total energy being affected. Application of this law simplifies the solution of some projectile problems as the following example shows. Example: A rock is projected with speed 5m/s on top of a building of height 8m. Find its speed when it lands. 9 5m/s i 8m f v Appling conservation of mechanical energy to the initial and final locations as indicated: 1 2 1 mvi mghi mv 2f mgh f 2 2 we see that m cancels out: 1 2 1 vi ghi v 2f gh f 2 2 Putting in values: 1 2 1 5 10 8 v 2 0 2 2 v 52 2 10 8 185 13.6m / s Note that this result is independent of the angle of elevation with which the rock is launched. For motion of an object on a frictionless railing such as a roller coaster, there is normal force in addition to gravitational force. The work energy theorem states that W g WFN K Since the work done by the normal force W FN is zero, we still expect conservation of mechanical energy. 10 Example: What is the minimum speed of a car at the bottom (point A) of a roller coaster in order to reach a peak location (B) 12m above A? What is its speed when it reaches the location C which is 8m above A but on the other side of the peak ? Solution: B C 12m 8m A vA From conservation of mechanical energy: 1 2 1 v A gh A v B2 ghB 2 2 To barely reach the point B, the condition is vB 0 . Since hA 0 by choice, we obtain 1 2 v A ghB 2 v A 2 ghB 2 10 12 15.5m / s Applying conservation of energy between B and C: 1 2 1 v B ghB vC2 ghC 2 2 vC 2 g hB hC 2 10 4 8.9m / s If the railing has friction, the law of conservation of mechanical energy breaks down. We need to include work done by friction, which as we have seen, is a kind of nonconservative force. In general, when non-conservative force is present, we need to explicitly isolate it in the work energy theorem, which now reads 11 W g W NC K and leads to K U WNC which is called the generalized work energy theorem When kinetic friction is the non-conservative force, the work W NC is always negative because the direction of kinetic friction is opposite to displacement. In this case, the total mechanical energy K U always decreases. This phenomenon is known as dissipation. As a result of dissipation, a steel ball rolling back and forth about the bottom of a railing eventually comes to a stop. A simple pendulum swinging back and forth in air will also eventually stop. Example: A 0.4-kg steel ball is released with zero speed at a point of a railing that is 5m above the bottom. Its speed is found to be 8m/s at the bottom. What is the work done by friction? 5m 8m/s K i U i U i mghi 0.4 10 5 20 J 1 1 K f U f K f mv 2f 0.4 8 2 12.8 J 2 2 WF K f U f K i U i 12.8 20 7.2 J If the length of the path followed by the steel is a quarter of a circle, we can find the friction force itself if it can be assumed to be constant. In this case, the path length is s 1 5 2r 7.9m 4 2 Using 12 WF FK s we find FK WF 7.2 0.91N s 7.9 Power The average power delivered by a force to an object undergoing a displacement during a time interval t is defined as: P W t where W is the work done during the displacement. The unit of work is J/s, and is abbreviated as W (Watt). The British unit of power is horse power (hp). 1 hp=746W For an object moving in one dimension and a force F acting in the same dimension, if the displacement during the time interval t is x , the work done by the force is W Fx P Fx Fv t where v is the average velocity. This formula has an interesting application to the motion of cars. If a car is moving with constant speed on a level road, the static friction force FS on its tires (traction) is forward and balances air resistance FR. The power delivered by traction is therefore P FS v FR v The power increases with the speed of the car both because of its explicit dependence on v and the fact that air resistance FR increases with speed. The power is eventually derivable from burning of the fuel inside the engine. We also say that P energy consumed time for the power consumption that generates the traction force by spinning the tires. When the car is accelerating, the tractive force is more than air resistance, and the power demand increases. 13 When the car is going uphill at a constant speed, the tractive force must balance both air resistance and the component of its weight down the road: FS FR mg sin FS v FN FR mg In this case the power consumption is P FR mg sin v and is higher than for the level road if v is the same. On the other hand, if P remains constant as the car starts to climb uphill, its speed will be reduced. 14 13. Impulse and Momentum The concept of momentum Consider an object of mass m acted on by a single force F. We write Newton’s second law in the form F ma where F is the average force and a is the average acceleration over an time interval t . The equation can be transformed as follows: p f pi v mv f vi mv f mvi F m t t t t What has happened is that we have introduced a quantity p mv called the momentum of the object, and shown that the difference between the final momentum p f and the initial momentum p i enters into the equation. We can also write p F t or, p F t The product Ft is called impulse. The last equation states that the change of momentum of an object is equal to the impulse it has received, and is known as the impulse-momentum theorem. The unit of momentum in the metric system is kg m / s . Note that momentum is a vector in the same direction as velocity. The impulse momentum theorem is useful in analyzing impact phenomena, in which an object experiences a force for a very short time duration, such as when a tennis ball is hit by a racket, or during a collision. For these phenomena, we have good knowledge of the state of motion of the object before and after impact, but what happens during the short interval of impact itself is complicated. The impulse momentum theorem allows us to estimate the average force experienced by the object during impact, as the following examples show. 15 Example: A 0.05 kg bullet traveling at 1,400 m/s is shot into a wooden target of thickness 0.1 m and emerges from it with the reduced velocity of 1,000m/s. Find the direction and magnitude of the average force experienced by the bullet. Solution: First, we can find the duration of impact from the thickness of the target and the average velocity v 1400 1000 1200m / s 2 t 0.1 8.3 10 5 s 1200 We can find p from an examination of the diagram, which shows its construction pi pf Δp x The magnitudes of the initial and final momentum are pi 0.05 1400 70kg m / s p f 0.05 1000 50kg m / s We see from the diagram that p is opposite to the velocity of the bullet, and has a magnitude of p 70 50 20kg m / s The magnitude of the force is p 20 F 2.4 10 5 N t 8.3 10 5 Thus very strong force occurs during impact. Another method of doing the problem makes use the components along the x-axis as shown. 16 x component of initial momentum pi 70kg m / s x component of final momentum p f 50kg m / s x component of p p 50 70 20kg m / s p 20 x component of F F 2.4 10 5 N 5 t 8.3 10 The negative sign indicates that the force is opposite to direction of the x-axis. Example: A 0.050 kg tennis ball traveling at 50m/s hits a racket and is returned with a speed of 30m/s. If the duration of impact is 1ms, what is the average force on the racket? Solution The difference in momentum p is as shown: pf pi Δp from which we see that p p f pi 0.05 50 0.05 30 0.4kg m / s The magnitude of the force on the ball is p 0.4 F 400 N t 1 10 1 In the component method, choosing the x-axis to point in the incoming direction of the ball, the x-component of the force on the ball is F p p f pi 0.05 50 0.05 30 400 N t t 1 10 3 and is thus opposite to the incoming direction. The force on the racket is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction. Forces arising from a continuous jet of water directed onto a surface can also be found from momentum considerations as the following example shows. Example: Rain pours down continuously at a speed of 20m/s on the rooftop of a car and at a rate of 0.3 kg/s. Find the force on the rooftop. Solution: We use a device of introducing a time interval t to help reasoning. The time interval t will eventually drop out of the final answer. The mass of water fallen on the rooftop during the interval t is t m m 17 where m mass fallen on rooftop per sec 0.3 kg / s The initial momentum carried by this mass of water is downward and equals to pi m v m vt in magnitude where v 20m / s is the speed of the rain drops. The final momentum is zero because when the rain drops splashes off the rooftop, its speed is reduced to zero. Therefore the magnitude of the force on the mass of rain being considered is F p m vt m v 0.3 20 6 N t t The force on the rooftop is equal in magnitude and directed downward. We can say that the downward momentum carried by the raindrops is destroyed by the upward force due to the rooftop, which then experiences an equal force in the opposite direction. 18 14 Conservation of Momentum Collisions form a class of impact phenomena because the durations are short and the forces involved are large. Consider the collision between two objects, labeled 1 and 2. Let their initial momenta (before collision) be p1i and p2i and their final momenta (after collision) be p1f and p2f. P1 P1i f P2i P2 f Each object changes its momentum because of the impulse it receives during the collision. Applying the impulse-momentum theorem to each object gives p1 F1 t p 2 F2 t where the F1 is the force on object 1 due to object 2, and F2 is the force on object 2 due to object 1. Accordingly to Newton’s third law, F1 and F2 are equal and opposite: F1 F2 0 Therefore p1 p2 0 Or, p1 p2 0 The sum p1 p2 is the total momentum of the system of two objects. The sum is not changed by collision. The statement that the total momentum before collision is equal to the total momentum after collision is known as conservation of momentum. The equation expressing this in the case of two body colliding and flying afterward is p1i p 2i p1 f p 2 f 19 The conservation of momentum holds in the general case of any number of objects involved in a collision with any number coming out of the collision. .In this case, we write pi p f In component form, the above is equivalent to the following equations for the x and y components respectively: pix p fx piy p fy 1 2 collisions Example: An 80-kg adult and a 20-kg child stand together in an ice skating ring. After pushing each other away, the child is observed to travel with speed 6m/s. What is the speed of the adult and in what direction? Solution: Choose the x-axis to point in the direction of the child’s velocity. x-component of the total momentum before collision =0 because neither object has velocity x-component of the total momentum after collision = 80 va 20 6 where va is the xcomponent of the velocity of the adult. Conservation of momentum implies 80va 120 0 va 120 1.5m / s 80 Thus the adult moves with speed 1.5m/s in the opposite direction to the child. When a cannon ball shoots out from the barrel of a gun with high speed, it carries away momentum in the forward direction. By conservation of momentum, the gun barrel acquires momentum backward and a smaller velocity because it has much more mass than the cannon ball. The motion of the gun barrel is called a recoil. An astronaut severed from his spaceship and floating freely in space can return to the spaceship by throwing his tool box in the direction opposite to the space ship. He will acquire a velocity toward the space ship because of recoil. 20 Example: The breakup of a nucleus in flight. The reaction U 238 He 4 Th 234 describes the decay of a uranium nucleus U of mass number 238 to a helium nucleus (mass number 4) and a thorium nucleus (mass number 234). The velocity of the uranium necleus is 5 10 4 m / s . The velocity of the helium nucleus is 2 10 6 m / s in the opposite direction. Find the velocity of the thorium nucleus. Solution: Choose the x-axis to point in the direction of the velocity of the uranium nucleus. Apply momentum afterward momentum before 234vTh 4 2 10 6 238 5 10 4 234vTh 8 10 6 11.90 10 6 vTh 11.9 10 6 8 10 6 1.7 10 4 m / s 234 A pictorial representation of the decay process is as shown: 2 1 Collisions Example A 1500-kg car travelling at 40m/s runs into a stationary 1000-kg car. The two become stuck together. Find the velocity of the wreck. 21 Solution: Choose x-axis to point in the direction of the moving car. Let v be the velocity of the wreckage. Apply momentum afterward momentum before 1500 1000 v 1500 40 1000 0 v 1500 40 24m / s 2500 Example: A 1500-kg car travelling at 30m/s collides head on with a 1000-kg car travelling at 10m/s in the opposite direction. The two become stuck together. Find the velocity of the wreck. Solution: With the same choice of x-axis, the conservation of momentum gives 1500 1000v 1500 30 1000 10 v 35000 14m / s 2500 Comparing the last two examples, we see that the result of the last one can be obtained from the previous one by adding a velocity of -10m/s to the velocity of every car before and after the collision. In fact, the two examples describe the same accident as observed by two pedestrians. One is stationary, and the other is running with speed 10m/s in the same direction as the velocity of the 1500-kg car. The last pedestrian would see the 1500kg travelling at 30m/s and the 1000-kg car at 10m/s in the opposite direction. This demonstrates that the conservation of momentum can be used by different observers. Although momentum is conserved during a collision, kinetic energy usually is not. Example: What is the change of kinetic energy in the previous example involving a moving and a stationary car? Solution: Total Kinetic energy before collision K i Total Kinetic energy after collision K f 1 1500 40 2 1.20 10 6 J 2 1 2500 24 2 0.72 10 6 J 2 K K f K i 0.48 106 J 4.8 105 J 22 Thus there is a loss of kinetic energy, which becomes heat. Example: A object of mass m traveling with speed v collides with a stationary target of mass 2m . After collision, the light object stops while the heavier one travels with speed v 2 . Is momentum conserved? Is mechanical energy conserved? Solution: Initial momentum = mv Final momentum = 2m v mv 2 Therefore momentum is conserved. 1 Initial kinetic energy = mv 2 2 2 Final kinetic energy = 1 1 v 2m mv 2 2 4 2 Therefore kinetic energy is not conserved. Non-conservation of mechanical energy in a collision is the norm. Such collisions are called inelastic collisions. A collision which conserves mechanical energy is called an elastic collision. For a two-body elastic collision in one dimension, the velocities of the two after collision can be determined. Let mass of the incoming object (the projectile) m1 mass of the target m2 velocity of projectile before collision v1i velocity of target before collision 0 (stationary target) velocity of projectile after collision v1 f velocity of target after collision v 2 f From conservation of momentum, m1v1 f m2 v 2 f m1v1i From conservation of mechanical energy 1 1 1 m1v12f m2 v 22 f m1v12i 2 2 2 These are two equations in the two unknowns v1 f and v 2 f . 23 The solution of these two equations proceeds as follows. If you are not interested, you can skip this part. Solution: We shall eliminate v1 f from the equations to end up with an equation for v 2 f . Define the mass ratio r m2 m1 Dividing each equation by m1 yields v1 f rv 2 f v1i v12f rv22 f v12i From the first equation v1 f v1i rv 2 f Substitute into the second equation: v 1i rv 2 f 2 rv 22 f v12i v12i 2rv1i v2 f r 2 v22 f rv22 f v12i r 2 r v22 f 2rv1i v2 f 0 v 2 f r 1v 2 f 2v1i 0 Thus there are two possibilities: v2 f 0 or v 2 f 2 v1i 1 r The first is uninteresting because it leads to v1 f v1i rv 2 f v1i which means that collision does not take place. Thus we take the second choice, which also gives 24 v1 f v1i rv 2 f v1i 2r 1 r v1i v1i 1 r 1 r Replacing r by m2 m1 yields the final form of the solution: v1 f m1 m2 v1i m1 m2 v2 f 2m1 v1i m1 m2 Special case 1: Light projectile and heavy target m1 m2 . In thus case we can neglect m1 in comparison with m2 . v1 f m2 v1i v1i m2 v2 f 2m1 v1i m2 Thus the projectile is reflected off the target with a speed essentially equal to its incoming speed, while the target moves very slowly after collisions. Special Case 2: Equal mass collision m1 m2 . v1 f 0 v2 f 2m1 v1i v1i m1 m1 The velocity of the projectile is transferred to the target at 100%. Special Case 3: Heavy projectile and light target m1 m2 . Neglecting m2 in comparison with m1 yields v1 f m1 v1i v1i m1 v2 f 2m1 v1i 2v1i m1 Thus the projectile velocity is essentially unchanged, while the target has twice the initial velocity of the projectile. The Ballistic Pendulum is an arrangement that can be used to measure the speed of a bullet. The bullet is shot into a wooden block hanging from a support, and becomes embedded in the block. Subsequently the block with the bullet in it swings upward and reach a highest position. By measuring the rise in height, we can deduce the speed of the bullet, provided the masses of the bullet and the block are known. The diagram is a sketch of the situation. 25 m v u M h M+ m Let m mass of bullet M mass of block v speed of bullet u speed of block bullet right after collision h max imum height of block above rest position We can apply conservation of momentum to the impact between the bullet and the block: m M u mv which can be solved to give v mM M u u m m as the mass of the bullet is usually much smaller than that of the block. We then apply conservation of mechanical energy to the rise of the block+bullet system to its maximum height when the speed is zero: 1 m M u 2 m M gh 2 which gives u 2 gh v M M u m m 2 gh 26 For example, with m 0.1kg M 2kg h 0.05m we find v 2 2 10 0.05 20m / s 0.1 For collisions in two dimension, we need to apply conservation of momentum separately for the x and the y components as the following example shows. Example: A 1500-kg car traveling at 40m/s due east collides with a 1000-kg car traveling at 50m/s due north. The two become stuck together. Find the speed and direction of the wreckage. y 40m/ s v x 1500k g 50m/ s 2500k g 1000k g Solution: Choosing x and y axes as shown. The x-component of momentum conservation gives 2500v x 1500 40 v x 24m / s The y-component of momentum conservation gives 2500v y 1000 50 v y 20m / s The magnitude of v is v 24 2 20 2 31m / s tan 1 20 40 24 The direction is 40º N of E. 27 Motion of a System of Particles. For a system of particles, we can divide up the forces on each particle into external and internal forces. Internal forces on each particle are due to other particles in the system, and they occur in pairs of equal magnitude and opposite directions, acting on differing particles, according to Newton’s third law. There we expect the sum of all internal forces on all the particles to cancel out in pairs, leading to Fint 0 For each particle, Newton’s second law states p Fext Fint t Summing over all particles, p Fext Fint Fext t If we introduce the total momentum of the system Pp the above can be written as P Fext t The total momentum is related to a concept called the center of mass. In one dimension, if the coordinates of the point masses m1 , m2 , are x1 , x2 ,, the coordinate of the center of mass is obtained from x m1 x1 m2 x2 m1 m2 mx m In two dimension, we add to the above equation the y-coordinate of the center of mass y my m The position vector of the center of mass is therefore 28 r mr m Or, Mr mr where M m is the total mass of the system. When positions of the particles change, so does the center of mass. The relation between the displacements are Mr mr Upon diving by t , the above equation gives Mv mv p P Thus, the total momentum is equal to the total mass times the velocity of the center of mass. The equation for the motion of the center of mass can be written as v P M Fext t t It is significant that we require no knowledge of internal forces when determining the acceleration of the center of mass. A rigid box can be considered as a system of particles if we imagine mentally dividing it into small bits. If you pull it with a string, an external force is applied. To find the rate of acceleration of the center of mass, we need only know the mass of the block and the pull force. We have been using this fact in our course all along. A system with no external forces is called an isolated system. For such system, we see P that 0 t P 0 The total momentum is conserved for an isolated system. The center of mass of an isolated system travels with constant velocity. 29 15. Kinematics of Rotation The radian measure of an angle is defined by the formula s r where r is the radius of a circle centered at the apex of the angle, and s is the arc length on the circle included between the two sides of the angle. The value of so obtained is independent of the size of the circle. s r For convenience in describing rotational motion, we can understand an angle in the generalized sense in the following way. Imagine an x-axis drawn fixed on a paper, and a rotating line segment drawn with one end fixed at the origin. As the segment rotates, it opens up an angle with the x-axis. The angle is considered positive if the sense of rotation is counter clockwise (ccw), and negative if clockwise (cw). When a complete ccw rotation is made, the angle is 360 , the radian measure of this angle is circumference 2r 2 radiu r Thus 2 radian equals 360º. Therefore 1 rad 360 57.3 2 Starting with an angle , rotating the segment through one complete revolution brings it back to the starting position. The same is true after multiple revolutions in one direction or the other. Therefore the angles 30 , 2 , 4 , , 2 , 4 , all represent the same position. Apparent size of an object. The apparent size of an object depends on the solid angle subtended at the eye by light rays emanating from the edges of the object. These light rays from a pencil-like configuration with the tip at the eye. In the case of a circular disk, the apparent size is governed by a planar angle subtended at the eye by the two rays coming from the ends of a diameter. r d s Suppose d is the diameter, and the object is quite far away so that its distance is equal to the radius of a circle centered at the eye but include the diameter of the object as a chord. Let denote the angle subtended at the eye by the object. Note that arc length s is approximately equal to the diameter d if the distance is large. Thus we have s d r r If we apply this to the moon, d diameter of the moon 2 1.74 106 m 3.5 10 6 m r dis tan ce of the moon 3.84 1011 m 3.5 10 6 360 3 3 0.5 8 9.2 10 rad 9.2 10 3.8 10 2 It turns out that a similar calculation for the apparent size of the sum also yields 0.5, which explains why we sometimes have total solar eclipse and some times have annular eclipse, as the distance between the earth and the sun has slight variability in the course of a year. The smallest angle an optical instrument can detect is called its resolving power. If the resolving power of the eye is 1/20 that of the apparent size of the moon, what is the maximum distance from which a coin of diameter 2cm can be seen as a tiny disk? 31 Solution: r d 1 2 4 0.5 0.025 0.025 4.4 10 rad 20 360 0.02 4 45m 4.4 10 which is a little less than half a football field away. Rotation of a rigid body In the simplest kind of rotation of a rigid body ( a rod, a disk, a bike wheel, etc), there is an axis of rotation that remains fixed in space. To keep track of the position of the rigid body, we can mark off a point P on the body, which then would move in a circle with the axis of rotation O as the center. We then choose an x-axis as reference, with its origin at the axis of rotation. The angle between the line segment OP and the x-axis can be used to represent the position of the rigid body, just like in the case of motion of a point object along the x-axis, the coordinate x is used to represent its position. After a time interval t , the angle changes by the amount . We define the average angular velocity by t and the instantaneous angular velocity by lim t as t 0 which is roughly speaking the instantaneous velocity over a very small time interval. The unit of angular velocity is rad/s. Another commonly used unit is rpm (revolutions per minute). The conversion factor is 1 rpm 2 rad 0.105 rad / s 60 s The average and instantaneous angular acceleration are defined by t lim as t 0 t For motion of constant acceleration, is a constant. The equations governing the kinematics of such rotations can be developed in parallel with the kinematics for uniform acceleration on a straight line using the following correspondence: 32 0 x v0 0 t v a v v0 at 1 2 1 2 at 2 v v v 0 2 x vt 0 t t 2 x v0 t 0 t 2 2 02 2 v 2 v02 2ax Example: A flywheel is initially rotating at 2500rpm. It is slowing down at a rate of 50 rad/s. How long does it take to stop and how many complete revolutions it has gone through before stopping? Solution: We list the known quantities as follows, considering the rotation to be ccw: 0 2500rpm 2500 2 rad / s 262rad / s 60 0 stopping 50 rad / s2 t 0 0 262 5.2s 50 t 0 2 t 0 262 5.2 680rad 2 Number of revolutions = 680 108 2 2 Tangential velocity Any point P on a rigid body rotating about an axis O travels in a circle of radius r with O as center. If vT is the magnitude of the instantaneous velocity of the point P, we expect vT to increase with r . For example, if you spin a meter stick about one end, the farther a point is from this end, the higher is the speed of the point. To derive the quantitative relationship, we choose a very small t ., during which the point P moves through a small arc of length s , the the line segment OP rotates through a small angle . From the relation 33 s r we divide both sides by t to obtain s r t t In the limit t 0 , this becomes vT r where is the instantaneous angular velocity of the rigid body. Transfer of Angular Velocity One way to step up or step down angular velocity can be illustrated by two cogged wheels in a bike connected by a chain. Since an equal of length of the chain is released from one wheel and taken up by the other, the linear speed of the release point on the first wheel is equal to the linear speed of uptake on the second wheel. If the radii of the two wheels are denoted by r1 and r2 , and the magnitude of their angular velocities are 1 and 2 , and further the common linear speed is v , we have v r11 v r22 r11 r22 r2 Thus the smaller wheel rotates with the higher angular velocity. In this case both wheels rotate in the same sense. When the two wheels are in contact at one point, so that their teeth are locked into each other, the contact point between the wheels share the same tangential speed. The above 34 derivation still applies. Except that now the senses of rotation of the two wheels are opposite. Example: CD playing. A laser beam is used to read the information stored in concentric circular tracks of a compact disk. The information is read at the rate of 1.3 m/s, which means a length of record of 1.3 m is read per second. As the reading progresses, the laser beam is shifted from the inside track to the outside track. The radius of the innermost track is 23mm, and that of the outermost track is 58mm. The total playing time is 75minute and 33 seconds, which equals 4473s. From these data we can calculate the angular velocity at the beginning 1 v 1.3 60 rpm 540rpm 3 56.5rad / s 56.5 r1 23 10 2 the angular velocity at the end 2 v 1.3 60 rpm 210rpm 3 22.4rad / s 22.4 r2 58 10 2 Thus the disk is slowing down in its rotation as the music is played. The angular acceleration is 2 1 t 22.4 56.5 3 2 7.6 10 rad / s 4473 The total angle rotated through is 1 2 2 5 t 1.76 10 rad The number of complete revolutions is 28,000 2 The total length of record read is vt 1.3 4473 5800m 3.6mi Rolling Motion When a bicycle wheel rolls on the ground to carry the biker forward, the axis of rotation is not fixed in space, but instead moves forward. If there is no slipping, the curved length on the wheel unfolds into the horizontal distance on the ground. The diagram shows the position of the wheel at two times, together with points P and Q marked off on the wheel. If s is the arc length PQ, is the angle between OP and OQ, and x is the forward distance traveled by the point O, the condition of no slipping is 35 x s Since s r , we have x r relating the forward distance to the angle of rotation, Dividing both sides by t leads to vO r relating the forward velocity of the point O to the angular velocity of rotation. P O Q Δs O Q P Δx Example: What is the angular velocity of the wheels of a car traveling at 60mph, if the diameter of each wheel is 80cm? How many complete turns does each wheel make after the car has traveled 1 mile? Solution: Part 1: vO 60mph 26.8m / s 0. 8 r 0. 4 m 2 v 26.8 O 67rad / s r 0.4 Part 2: x 1mi 1.6 10 3 m x 1.6 10 3 4 10 3 rad r 0.4 number of revolutions 637 2 36