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Unit 8: Circular Motion
31

Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Jan 18, 2016

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Page 1: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Unit 8: Circular Motion

Page 2: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Section A: Angular Units

Corresponding Textbook Sections:– 10.1

PA Assessment Anchors:– S11.C.3.1

Page 3: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Angular Position

Defined as the angle, , that a line from the axle to a spot on the wheel makes with a reference line

Unit: Radian (rad)

[dimensionless]

Page 4: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Sign convention for angular position:

If > 0, counterclockwise rotation

If < 0, clockwise rotation

Page 5: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Converting between degrees and radians

1 revolution = 360 = 2 rad

1 rad = 57.3

Convert the same way you would between any other units.

Page 6: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Section B: Angular / Linear Relationships

Corresponding Textbook Sections:– 10.3

PA Assessment Anchors:– S11.C.3.1

Page 7: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Arc Length

The arc length is the distance from a reference line to a spot of interest on a circle.

Equation:

s = r

Page 8: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Angular Velocity

Symbol:

Units: s-1 or 1/s

av =Δθ

Δt

Page 9: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Sign Convention for

If > 0 Counterclockwise rotation

If < 0 Clockwise rotation

Page 10: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #1

An old phonograph rotates clockwise at 33⅓ rpm. What is the angular velocity in rad/s?

Page 11: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #2

If a CD rotates at 22 rad/s, what is its angular speed in rpm?

Page 12: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Period

The period is the time it takes to complete one revolution.

Units: seconds (s)

T = 2π

ω

Page 13: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #3

Find the period of a record that is rotating at 45 rpm.

Page 14: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Angular Acceleration

The change in angular speed of a rotating object per unit of time.

Units: rad/s2

α =ΔΔt

Page 15: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #4

As the wind dies, a windmill that was rotating at 2.1 rad/s begins to slow down with a constant angular acceleration of 0.45 rad/s2. How long does it take for the windmill to come to a complete stop?

Page 16: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Section C: Angular Kinematics

Corresponding Textbook Sections:– 10.2

PA Assessment Anchors:– S11.C.3.1

Page 17: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Relationship between angular and linear quantities

Linear Quantity Angular Quantity

x

v ω

a α

Based on these relationships, we can rewrite thekinematics equations from 1-D and 2-D Kinematics

Page 18: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Angular Kinematics Equations

v = vo + at ω =ωo +αt

x = xo + vot +1

2at 2 θ =θo +ωot +

1

2αt 2

v 2 = vo2 + 2aΔx ω2 =ωo

2 + 2αΔθ

Page 19: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

So, basically…

These are just variations of equations we already know how to use.

They work the same way as the linear equations.

We’ll use the same setup as before:• Data table, equation, picture, etc…

Page 20: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #1

To throw a curveball, a pitcher gives the ball an initial angular speed of 36 rad/s. When the catcher gloves the ball 0.595 s later, its angular speed has decreased to 34.2 rad/s. What is the ball’s angular acceleration?

Page 21: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #2

Based on the last problem, how many revolutions does the ball make before being caught?

Page 22: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #2

Refer to Example 10-2 on page 280

Page 23: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Section D: Torque

Corresponding Textbook Sections:– 11.1, 11.2

PA Assessment Anchors:– S11.C.3.1

Page 24: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

What is Torque?

Torque is the rotational equivalent of force

It depends on:– Force applied– Distance from the force to the axis of

rotation

Page 25: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

More on Torque…

Equation:

Units: Nm

τ =rFGreek Letter “tau”

Axis of Rotation(where it turns)

Page 26: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #1

If the minimum required torque to open a door is 3.1 Nm, what force must be applied if:– r = 0.94 m– r = 0.35 m

Page 27: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Section E: Moment of Inertia

Corresponding Textbook Sections:– 10.5

PA Assessment Anchors:– S11.C.3.1

Page 28: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

What is “Moment of Inertia”?

The “rotational mass” of an object– Rotational mass depends on actual mass,

radius, and distribution of mass

Useful for determining rotational KE:

KE =1

2Iω2

Moment of inertia

Page 29: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.
Page 30: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #1

What is the moment of inertia of a hollow sphere with mass of 40 kg and radius of 3 m?

Page 31: Unit 8: Circular Motion. Section A: Angular Units Corresponding Textbook Sections: –10.1 PA Assessment Anchors: –S11.C.3.1.

Practice Problem #2

A grindstone with radius of 0.61 m is being used to sharpen an axe. If the linear speed of the stone relative to the ax is 1.5 m/s, and the stones rotational KE is 13 J, what is its moment of inertia?