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shaka23h
Oct22-06, 06:52 PM
Suppose you are riding a stationary exercise bicycle, and the electronic meter indicates that the wheel is rotating at 10.4 rad/s. The wheel has a radius of 0.507 m. If you ride the bike for 42.6 min, how far would you have gone if the bike could move?

ok here is what i know

my W (angular speed) is 10.4 rad//s
Radius = 0.507 m
time = 42.6 min x 60 sec = 2556 sec

I tried to use this equation

theta = 1/2 (w0 + w )t and I got a value of 13291.2 radians can I use this value to find the distance, or am I doing something wrong?

Thanks

Andrew Mason
Oct22-06, 07:11 PM
Suppose you are riding a stationary exercise bicycle, and the electronic meter indicates that the wheel is rotating at 10.4 rad/s. The wheel has a radius of 0.507 m. If you ride the bike for 42.6 min, how far would you have gone if the bike could move?

ok here is what i know

my W (angular speed) is 10.4 rad//s
Radius = 0.507 m
time = 42.6 min x 60 sec = 2556 sec

I tried to use this equation

theta = 1/2 (w0 + w )t and I got a value of 13291.2 radians can I use this value to find the distance, or am I doing something wrong?

Thanks
You have to the relationship between the angular speed and tangential velocity. If you assume that there is no slippage between the wheel and the road, then velocity x time = distance. Do you know how \omega is related to v and R?

AM

shaka23h
Oct22-06, 07:47 PM
ya I figured it out.

Thanks a lot