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Chapter 8 Rotational Motion Rotation- circular movement of an object around a central point or axis Revolution- a single turn around the center point of a circular path. Specific points on a rigid object will move in a circular path Measuring a fraction of a revolution • Degrees-360°=1 revolution Arbitrary number possibly chosen because it approximates the days in a year, is divisible by 24 different divisors including all numbers from 1-10 except 7 • Grad- 1/400 of a revolution; 400 grad=1 revolution Sometimes used in surveying and seems to be derived from the fact that is equal to 1/100 of a right angle • Radian- is a ratio equal to the arc length divided by the radius Credited to Roger Cotes an English mathematician who worked closely with Isaac Newton; 1714 For a full revolution: 2 r 2 rad r Arc length s (in radians) Radius r 2 rad 360 Converting radians to degrees ϴdegrees= ϴradians x 180° 𝜋 Converting degrees to radians ϴradians = ϴdegrees x 𝜋 180° Adjacent Synchronous Satellites Synchronous satellites are put into an orbit whose radius is 4.23×107m. If the angular separation of the two satellites is 2.00 degrees, find the arc length that separates them. Arc length s (in radians) Radius r rad 0.0349 rad 2.00 deg 180 deg 7 s r 4.23 10 m0.0349 rad s 1.48 106 m (920 miles) DEFINITION OF ANGULAR DISPLACEMENT The angle through which the object rotates is called angular displacement. By convention, the angular displacement is positive if it is counterclockwise and negative if it is clockwise. SI Unit of Angular Displacement: radian (rad) Rotational Dynamics • Changes in rotational movements; starting an object rotating or speeding up or slowing down a rotation • Forces which change angular velocity change the rotation of an object. • Opening and closing a door requires a force which causes the door to rotate on an axis of rotation; in this case the axis of rotation is an imaginary line vertical to the hinges. When opening a door, the force is exerted on the doorknob at a right angle to the axis away from the hinges Which of the following diagrams will need more force to open the door the same distance. (same angular displacement) The change in angular velocity (rotation) is determined by 3 things • Magnitude of the force • Distance from the axis to where the force is applied • The direction of the force. Torque- a measure of how effectively a force causes a rotation; The magnitude of the torque is the product of the force and the lever arm; units N·m • Lever arm- the perpendicular distance from the axis to the point where the force is exerted. • If the force is perpendicular to the radius of rotation the lever arm is simply the distance from the axis • For the doorknob it is the distance from the hinges 𝝉 = 𝑭𝒓 If the force is applied at an angle the lever arm is shortened and is calculated by multiplying the distance (r) times sin of θ Fr sin Force vs. Torque • Force causes things to accelerate. • If you want something to accelerate, apply a force. • F = ma • Units: Newtons (N) • Torque causes things to rotate. • If you want something to rotate, apply a torque. • Torque = perpendicular force x lever arm • Units: mN or Nm HOMEWORK pg. 203 11-15 Torque and Balancing • If a teeter-totter is balanced, that means that the torque on both sides is equal but in the opposite direction. • A common mistake is that students think the force is the same on both sides but that is not true. THE TORQUE MUST BE THE EQUAL! 𝜏1=𝜏2 𝐹𝑔1𝑟1 = 𝐹𝑔2𝑟2 Torque Practice Problem F =? 40 kg • A 40 kg child sits 1.5 meters away from the center of a teeter-totter. How much force does his dad need to exert 2 meters from the center (on the other side) to prevent the child from moving? Example; Kerriann with a mass of 56 kg and Aysha with a mass of 43 Kg want to balance on a 1.75 meter seesaw. Where does the pivot point (fulcrum ) need to be? Define Kariann’s distance in terms of the length of the seesaw and Aysha’s distance. RK= 1.75m- rA Where there is no rotation the sum of the torques is equal to zero. Known: Mk= 56kg M A= 43 kg Rk + RA = 1.75m Kariann: FgK=mKg FgK=(56 kg) (9.8 m/s2) FgK=550 N Unknown: Rk= ? RA=? Aysha: FgA=mAg FgA=(43 kg) (9.8m/s2) FgA=420 N Fgkrk=FgArA Fgk (1.75m - rA) = FgArA Solve for rA 550N (1.75- rA )= 420N rA 962.5-550 rA = 420rA 962.5= 970 rA rA= .99 m from Aysha Moment of inertia- the resistance of an object to rotation. 𝐼 = 𝑚𝑟 2 The farther the mass is from the center of rotation the greater the moment of inertia The distribution of mass matters here—these two objects have the same mass, but the one on the left has a greater moment inertia, because so much of its mass is far from the axis of rotation. Moment of inertia involving several objects being rotated. 𝐼= 𝑚1𝑟12 + 𝑚2𝑟22+ . . . . . . A baton that is .65 m has 2 objects (ball and tip) on its ends that both have a mass of .30 kg. Find the moment of inertia of the baton if it is rotated at the midpoint between the objects. NEGLECT THE MASS OF THE ROD CONNECTING THE OBJECTS. M=.30 kg Length of baton= .65 m I= m1r12 + m2r22 I= (.30 kg)(.325m)2 + (.30 kg)(.325m)2 I= .063 kg ∙m2 What if the baton was rotated around one end? I= (.30 kg)(.65 m)2 I= .13 kg ∙m2 Newton’s 2nd Law for rotational motion 𝐹 a= 𝑚 α= Replace a with angular acceleration α F with net torque τnet m with moment of inertia I τnet 𝐼 EXAMPLE: a solid steel wheel has a mass of 15 kg and a diameter of .44 m You want to rotate at 8.0 rev/s. What torque must be applied? If you apply the torque by wrapping a strap around the outside how much force needs to be applied? HOMEWORK; Pg. 208 21, 22, 24 Pg. 210 25-29