View Full Version : Question involving flywheel.
PhysicsPhun
Mar30-04, 09:27 PM
I missed a week of school so I'm a bit behind, i do have a book so i need just a bit of guidance. Any extra help would be appreciated.
Question Part 1
The flywheel of a steam engine runs with a constant angular speed of 115 rev/min. When steam is shut off, the friction of the bearings and the air (assumed constant) brings the wheel to rest in 2.20 hours. How many rotations does the wheel make before coming to rest?
Part 2
Consider a particle that is located at a distance of 37.0 centimeters from the axis of rotation when the flywheel is turning at 0.390 rev/min. What is the magnitude of the net linear acceleration of this particle?
cookiemonster
Mar30-04, 09:46 PM
Angular motion formulas have a direct analog to kinematics formulas. The formula relating velocity and acceleration in kinematics,
v = at
simply becomes
\Delta \omega = \alpha \Delta t
where omega is the angular velocity and alpha is the angular acceleration. From that formula, you can calculate the acceleration. Then we have the equation
\Delta(v^2) = 2a\Delta x
becomes
\Delta(\omega^2) = 2\alpha \Delta \theta
from which you can calculate theta.
For the second part, centripetal acceleration is related to linear velocity by
a = \frac{v^2}{r}
and linear velocity is related to angular velocity by
v= \omega r
Combine the two and you're done.
cookiemonster
PhysicsPhun
Mar30-04, 11:20 PM
Got the first part, and now workin to understand the second. I'll let you know. Thanks.
PhysicsPhun
Mar30-04, 11:43 PM
For Part two, this is what i've come up with and I'm stuck on.
w = 115 rev/min
r = .37 m
Does v^2 in the first equation equal (wr)^2?
I missed all the work on Omega and such, i'm having alot of trouble with some work.
cookiemonster
Mar31-04, 01:49 AM
Yes. v^2 = (wr)^2.
cookiemonster
PhysicsPhun
Mar31-04, 01:35 PM
Therefore..
(wr)^2/.37 should give me my answer?
cookiemonster
Mar31-04, 01:43 PM
Yes.
cookiemonster
PhysicsPhun
Mar31-04, 05:13 PM
I'm getting 4893.25.. m/s^2 and that's not right.
Should i be converting 115 rev/min to something?
Michael D. Sewell
Mar31-04, 06:07 PM
I'm getting 4893.25.. m/s^2 and that's not right.
Should i be converting 115 rev/min to something?
radians/min?
PhysicsPhun
Mar31-04, 06:22 PM
I'll look up how to do that. or does anyone know off hand?
One revolution = 2π radians;
One minute = 60 seconds.
cookiemonster
Mar31-04, 06:54 PM
Didn't you say that it was going .390 rev/min?
(.390rev/min)(1min/60sec)(2pi rad/1rev) = .0408 rad/s
cookiemonster
PhysicsPhun
Mar31-04, 07:08 PM
Consider a particle that is located at a distance of 37.0 centimeters from the axis of rotation when the flywheel is turning at 0.390 rev/min. What is the magnitude of the net linear acceleration of this particle?
Ya you're right Cookie.. I was lookin at the first part.
(wr)^2/r
(.0408*.37)^2/.37
a =.0006159 m/s^2.. Does that look right?
cookiemonster
Mar31-04, 07:11 PM
.39 rev/min isn't very fast.
cookiemonster
PhysicsPhun
Mar31-04, 07:22 PM
so my answer is on target?
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