Find Magnitude of Initial Acceleration for Rod of Length 1.29m

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the initial acceleration of a uniform rod of length 1.29 m, pivoted at one end and released from an angle of 21.0° above the horizontal. The moment of inertia (I) was initially calculated using the formula I = (1/2)ML^2, yielding I = 0.832 kg*m². However, the correct moment of inertia for a uniform rod is I = (1/3)ML². The torque (τ) was computed as τ = 2.27 Nm, leading to an angular acceleration (α) of 2.73 rad/s², and a linear acceleration (a) of 1.76 m/s². The discussion emphasizes the importance of using the correct inertia formula and understanding the angle for torque calculations.

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A uniform rod of length 1.29 m is attached to a frictionless pivot at one end. It is released from rest from an angle q = 21.0° above the horizontal. Find the magnitude of the initial acceleration of the rod's center of mass.
[tex]I= (1/2)ML^2[/tex]
I= (1/2)(1.29^2), since mass isn't given I just used 1 kg.
I=.832 kg*m^2
[tex]\tau= rFsin \theta[/tex] =.645(9.8)(sin 21)= 2.27 Nm
[tex]\tau = I \alpha[/tex]
2.27= .832 [tex]\alpha[/tex]
[tex]\alpha[/tex] = 2.73 rad/s^2
[tex]a= \alpha * r[/tex]
a= 2.73 * .645
a= 1.76 m/s^2
This isn't right.. can someone help me?
 
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This is not a uniform DISK, it is a uniform ROD.
Look up in a table the Inertia
(unless you want to calculate it yourself, using integration)
is it 1/3 M L^2 , or is it 1/12 M L^2 ?

Also, the angle theta that you take the sine of
is the angle that sweeps from the r_vector direction
to the F_vector direction ... as in the right-hand-rule?

(gravity is down, not sideways! )
 
I got it. Thanks
 

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