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Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion
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Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion

Page 2: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

When something spins around a certain point its called – circular motion

A circle of radius “r” has a circumference 2πr and has an angular measure of 360°

Circular motion is describes in terms of the angle that the object moves.

when the CD (compact disc) in Figure 1 rotates about its center—each point in the object follows a circular arc. Consider a line from the center of the CD to its edge. Each pit used to record sound along this line moves through the same angle in the same amount of time. The rotation angle is the amount of rotation and is analogous to linear distance. We define the rotation angle Δθ to be the ratio of the arc length to the radius of curvature:Δθ=Δsr.

Page 3: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Angles in physics are measured in radians (rad) The angular displacement in radians (∆ϴ) is the ratio

of the change in arc length (s) to the radius (r) of a circle

Conversions: 2π radians = 360° = 1 rev

And 1 rad = 1800/ π = 57.30

Formula: ∆ϴ = ∆s r

Units cancel out and rad is used

Page 4: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.
Page 5: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Angular Speed describes the rate of rotation

Formula: ω = ∆ϴ / ∆ t Units: rad / sec Greek letter omega (ω) = angular speed Average angular speed = angular displacement / time interval When an object spins, we can describe how fast its going in

terms of either: degrees/sec or revolutions/sec or radians/sec

Example Problem: Earth makes one rotation (3600) about its axis in one day (24 hours)If 3600 = 2 π rad and 24 hours = 86400 sec And 2 x π = 6.28Then, 2 π rad / 86400 sec =

Earth’s angular speed = 7.27 x 10 -5 rad/sec

Page 6: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

In a certain game show, contestants spin a wheel when it is their turn. One contestant gives the wheel an initial angular speed of 3.20 rad/s. It then rotates through one-and-one-quarter revolutions and comes to rest on the BANKRUPT space. Through what angle has the wheel turned when its angular speed is 1.90 rad/s?

Page 7: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Angular acceleration occurs when angular speed changes

Formula α = ∆ω ∆ tGreek letter α = alpha

Average angular acceleration = change in angular speed / time interval

Page 8: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Linear Angular

x ϴ

v ω

a α

Comparing angular and linear quantities

Page 9: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

7.2 Tangential and Centripetal Acceleration

Objects in circular motion have a tangential speed Any two objects have the same angular speed and

angular acceleration regardless of distance from center but….

If the two objects are different distances from the axis of rotation, they have different tangential speeds

(instantaneous linear speed at that point)

Page 10: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Tangential SpeedFormula: distance from the axis (r) x instantaneous angular speed (ω)

Vtan = r x ω

tangential speed and angular speed

Page 11: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Tangential Acceleration

•instantaneous linear acceleration is tangent to the circular path

atan = r x α

tangential acceleration = distance from the axis x angular acceleration

Page 12: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Centripetal Acceleration• Centripetal - “towards the center” • Since Velocity is a vector there are 2 ways an acceleration can be produced:• change in magnitude• and/or change in direction• For a car moving in a circular path with constant speed the object is accelerating due to a change in direction.• Experienced by any object that travels in a curved path

ac = vtan2

r centripetal acceleration = (tangential

speed)2

distance from the axis

ac = r ● ω2

Page 13: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Since Vtan = r ωavg

And ac = Vtan2

r

Sooo, ac = (r2 ● ω2) r

Or ac = r ● ω2

Page 14: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

7-3 Causes of Circular Motion

Force that maintains circular motionCentripetal Force - any force towards

centerExamples: Earth’s gravitational pull on moon or the electric force that pulls electrons around atomic nuclei According to Newton’s 2nd Law:

Fc = m x ac or

Fc = m ● vtan2 or

r

Fc = m x r x ω2

Units are in Newtons (N)

Centripetal force

Page 15: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

3 Types of Acceleration

1)Linear (tangential) – rate of change of speed… due to change in speed

units: m/s2

2) Angular – rate of change of angular speed – due to change in speed

units: rad/s2

3) Centripetal – a center-seeking acceleration – due to change in direction

units: m/s2

http://www.pbs.org/opb/circus/classroom/circus-physics/centripetal-acceleration/

Page 16: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation

Why do our planets stay in the sun’s orbit?Why does the moon stay in orbit around the Earth? Mutual force of attraction between 2 objects According to Newton’s 2nd Law of Motion

Fg = G m1m2

r2

G = constant of universal gravitation = 6.673 x 10 -11 N m2

kg2

Page 17: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.
Page 18: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.
Page 19: Rotational Motion and the Law of Gravity 7.1 Measuring Rotational Motion.

Launch Speed less than 8000 m/sProjectile falls to Earth

Launch Speed less than 8000 m/sProjectile falls to Earth

Launch Speed equal to 8000 m/sProjectile orbits Earth - Circular Path

Launch Speed greater than 8000 m/sProjectile orbits Earth - Elliptical Path