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Download Lecture 03: Rotational Dynamics II: 2nd Law
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Physics 106: Mechanics Lecture 03 Wenda Cao NJIT Physics Department Rotational Equilibrium and Rotational Dynamics II Rotational Kinetic Energy Moment of Inertia Torque Newton 2nd Law for Rotational Motion: Torque and angular acceleration Februaryl 3, 2011 Rotational Kinetic Energy There is an analogy between the kinetic energies associated with linear motion (K = ½ mv 2) and the kinetic energy associated with rotational motion (KR= ½ Iw2) Rotational kinetic energy is not a new type of energy, the form is different because it is applied to a rotating object Units of rotational kinetic energy are Joules (J) Februaryl 3, 2011 Moment of Inertia of Point Mass For a single particle, the definition of moment of inertia is 2 I mr m is the mass of the single particle r is the rotational radius SI units of moment of inertia are kg.m2 Moment of inertia and mass of an object are different quantities It depends on both the quantity of matter and its distribution (through the r2 term) Februaryl 3, 2011 Moment of Inertia of Point Mass For a composite particle, the definition of moment of inertia is 2 2 2 2 2 I mi ri m1r1 m2 r2 m3r3 m4r4 ... P mi is the mass of the ith single particle ri is the rotational radius of ith particle SI units of moment of inertia are kg.m2 cm m L P m cm m P m cm m L/2 L L/2 Februaryl 3, 2011 m Moment of Inertia of Extended Objects Divided the extended objects into many small volume elements, each of mass Dmi We can rewrite the expression for I in terms of Dm I Dmi lim0 ri 2 Dmi r 2dm i With the small volume segment assumption, I r r 2dV If r is constant, the integral can be evaluated with known geometry, otherwise its variation with position must be known Februaryl 3, 2011 Moment of Inertia for some other common shapes Februaryl 3, 2011 Februaryl 3, 2011 Parallel-Axis Theorem In the previous examples, the axis of rotation coincided with the axis of symmetry of the object For an arbitrary axis, the parallel-axis theorem often simplifies calculations The theorem states I = ICM + MD 2 I is about any axis parallel to the axis through the center of mass of the object ICM is about the axis through the center of mass D is the distance from the center of mass axis to the arbitrary axis Februaryl 3, 2011 • Rotation axes perpendicular to plane of figure • Masses on the corners of a rectangle, sides a & b h2 = (a/2)2 + (b/2)2 mir2,i I • About an axis through the CM: ICM b m • About an axis “P” through a corner: IP 0 ma2 m b2 m a2 b2 m h a2 b2 2 2 4 m h 4m m a b 4 4 2 a m X cm h m P 2m a2 b2 • Using the Parallel Axis Theorem directly for the same corner axis: IP Icm Mtoth 2 a2 b2 2 2 m a b 4m 2m a b 4 4 2 2 Februaryl 3, 2011 Force vs. Torque Forces cause accelerations What cause angular accelerations ? A door is free to rotate about an axis through O There are three factors that determine the effectiveness of the force in opening the door: The magnitude of the force The position of the application of the force The angle at which the force is applied Februaryl 3, 2011 General Definition of Torque Let F be a force acting on an object, and let r be a position vector from a rotational center to the point of application of the force. The magnitude of the torque is given by rF sin 0° or 180 °: torque are equal to zero 90° or 270 °: torque attain to the maximum Torque will have direction If the turning tendency of the force is counterclockwise, the torque will be positive If the turning tendency is clockwise, the torque will be negative Februaryl 3, 2011 Net Torque The force F1 will tend to cause a counterclockwise rotation about O The force F2 will tend to cause a clockwise rotation about O S 1 2 F1d1 – F2d2 If S 0, starts rotating Rate of rotation of an If S 0, rotation rate object does not change, does not change unless the object is acted on by a net torque Februaryl 3, 2011 Torque on a Rotating Object Consider a particle of mass m rotating in a circle of radius r under the influence of tangential force F t The tangential force provides a tangential acceleration: Ft = mat Multiply both side by r, then rFt = mrat Since at = r, we have rFt = mr2 So, we can rewrite it as = mr2 = I Februaryl 3, 2011 Torque on a Solid Disk Consider a solid disk rotating about its axis. The disk consists of many particles at various distance from the axis of rotation. The torque on each one is given by = mr2 The net torque on the disk is given by S = (Smr2) A constant of proportionality is the moment of inertia, I = Smr2 = m1r12 + m2r22 + m3r32 + … So, we can rewrite it as S = I Februaryl 3, 2011 Newton’s Second Law for a Rotating Object When a rigid object is subject to a net torque (≠0), it undergoes an angular acceleration S I The angular acceleration is directly proportional to the net torque The angular acceleration is inversely proportional to the moment of inertia of the object The relationship is analogous to F ma Februaryl 3, 2011 Februaryl 3, 2011 Example 1: second law for rotation When she is launched from a springboard, a diver's angular speed about her center of mass changes from zero to 6.20 rad/s in 220 ms. Her rotational inertia about her center of mass is constant at 12.0 kg·m2. During the launch, what are the magnitudes of (a) her average angular acceleration and (b) the average external torque on her from the board? a) Use: or wf w0 t ave b) Use: I w f w0 t Dw Dt 6.20 28.2 rad/s 2 0.22 12 kg.m2 ave I ave 12 28.2 338 N.m Februaryl 3, 2011 Example 2: for an unbalanced bar Bar is massless and originally horizontal Rotation axis at fulcrum point +y N has zero torque Find angular acceleration of bar and the linear acceleration of m1 just after you let go Use: net net Itot Itot where: Itot I1 I2 m1L21 m2L22 net o,i m1gL1 m2gL2 What happened to sin() in moment arm? m1g N L2 fulcrum m2g Constraints: Using specific numbers: Let m1 = m2= m L1=20 cm, L2 = 80 cm gL1 gL2 g(0.2 - 0.8) L21 L22 0.2 2 0.8 2 8.65 rad/s 2 Clockwise net torque total I about pivot L1 m1gL1 m2gL2 m1L21 m2L22 a1 L1 1.7 m/s 2 Accelerates UP Februaryl 3, 2011 Newton 2nd Law in Rotation Suppose everything is as it was in the preceding example, but the bar is NOT horizontal. Assume both masses are equal. Which of the following is the correct equation for the angular acceleration? net o,i m1gL1 cos() m2gL2 cos() L1 Itot I1 I2 m1L21 m2L22 [m1L1 m2L2 ] m1L21 m2L22 g cos() N m1g fulcrum L2 m2g (L1 L 2 ) L21 L22 gcos() net Itot Februaryl 3, 2011 Strategy to use the Newton 2nd Law Many components in the system means several (N) unknowns…. … need an equal number of independent equations Draw or sketch system. Adopt coordinates, name the variables, indicate rotation axes, list the known and unknown quantities, … • Draw free body diagrams of key parts. Show forces at their points of application. find torques about a (common) axis Note: can have • May need to apply Second Law twice to each part Fnet .eq. 0 but net .ne. 0 Translation: Fnet Fi ma Rotation: net i I • Make sure there are enough (N) equations; there may be constraint equations (extra conditions connecting unknowns) • Simplify and solve the set of (simultaneous) equations. • Interpret the final formulas. Do they make intuitive sense? Refer back to the sketches and original problem • Calculate numerical results, and sanity check anwers (e.g., right order of magnitude?) Februaryl 3, 2011 Rotating Rod A uniform rod of length L and mass M is attached at one end to a frictionless pivot and is free to rotate about the pivot in the vertical plane as in Figure. The rod is released from rest in the horizontal position. What are the initial angular acceleration of the rod and the initial translational acceleration of its right end? Februaryl 3, 2011 Rotating Rod L 0 Mg ( 2 ) 1 I ML 2 3 Mg ( L / 2) 3 g 2 I ML / 3 2L 3 at L g 2 Februaryl 3, 2011 The Falling Object A solid, frictionless cylindrical reel of mass M = 2.5 kg and radius R = 0.2 m is used to draw water from a well. A bucket of mass m = 1.2 kg is attached to a cord that is wrapped around the cylinder. (a) Find the tension T in the cord and acceleration a of the object. (b) If the object starts from rest at the top of the well and falls for 3.0 s before hitting the water, how far does it fall ? Februaryl 3, 2011 Example, Newton’s Second Law for Rotation Draw free body diagrams of each object Only the cylinder is rotating, so apply S = I The bucket is falling, but not rotating, so apply SF = ma Remember that a = r and solve the resulting equations Februaryl 3, 2011 • • • • Cord wrapped around disk, hanging weight Cord does not slip or stretch constraint Disk’s rotational inertia slows accelerations Let m = 1.2 kg, M = 2.5 kg, r =0.2 m For mass m: y T mg Fy ma mg T T m (g a) r Unknowns: T, a support force at axis “O” has zero torque a FBD for disk, with axis at “o”: N T 0 Tr I Mg I Tr m(g a)r 1 I Mr 2 1 2 Mr 2 Unknowns: a, 2 So far: 2 Equations, 3 unknowns Need a constraint: Substitute and solve: 2mgr 2mr 2 2 Mr Mr 2 mg (1 2 m 2mg ) M Mr a r from “no slipping” assumption mg ( 24 rad/s 2 ) r(m M/2) Februaryl 3, 2011 • • • • Cord wrapped around disk, hanging weight Cord does not slip or stretch constraint Disk’s rotational inertia slows accelerations Let m = 1.2 kg, M = 2.5 kg, r =0.2 m For mass m: y T mg Fy ma mg T T m (g a) Unknowns: T, a mg ( 24 rad/s 2 ) r(m M/2) a mg ( 4.8 m/s 2 ) (m M/2) T m ( g a) 1.2(9.8 - 4.8) 6N r support force at axis “O” has zero torque a mg 1 1 x f - x f vi t at 2 0 4.8 32 21.6m 2 2 Februaryl 3, 2011