Solve Rotational Friction Problem with Steel Rod & Balls

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on solving a rotational friction problem involving a steel rod and attached balls. The rod, rotating at 43.0 rev/s, experiences friction that causes it to stop in 25.0 seconds. Key calculations include determining angular acceleration, retarding torque, energy loss due to friction, and total revolutions during deceleration. The moment of inertia must account for both the rod and the attached balls, using the correct formulas for each component. Clarifications on mass contributions and inertia calculations are emphasized to achieve accurate results.
seraphimhouse
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Homework Statement



Attached to each end of a thin steel rod of length 1.00 m and mass 6.80 kg is a small ball of mass 1.15 kg. The rod is constrained to rotate in a horizontal plane about a vertical axis through its midpoint. At a certain instant, it is rotating at 43.0 rev/s. Because of friction, it slows to a stop in 25.0 s. Assuming a constant retarding torque due to friction, compute (a) the angular acceleration, (b) the retarding torque, (c) the total energy transferred from mechanical energy to thermal energy by friction, and (d) the number of revolutions rotated during the 25.0 s.

Homework Equations



K = Kf - Ki = (1/2)Iwf^2 - (1/2)IWi^2 = W
T = Ia (a = angular acceleration)

The Attempt at a Solution



I found the angular acceleration to be -10.816 rad / s^2
and the number of revolutions to be 537.42 rev

For torque i used the equation T=Ia where I = 1/12ML^2 where M is the total mass of the balls attached to each end of the rod plus the mass of the rod itself which is a total of 9.10 kg. I got T = -8.202 [N m] and for the work I used the work equation but got a really high solution which was -27723 J.

Both are wrong according to my homework's website
 
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You can't just add the masses of the balls to the mass of the rod the way you did. The moment of inertia of the system is the moment of inertia of the rod (1/12)ML2 to which you add the moments of inertia of the two masses m(L/2)2+m(L/2)2.
 
so would m be half the mass of the rod plus the mass of one ball?
 
No. M in my expression is the mass of the rod (6.80 kg) and m is the mass of one ball (1.15 kg). Then

I=\frac{1}{12}ML^2+2 \times m(\frac{L}{2})^2

where L = 1.0 m.
 
Thank you!
 
Kindly see the attached pdf. My attempt to solve it, is in it. I'm wondering if my solution is right. My idea is this: At any point of time, the ball may be assumed to be at an incline which is at an angle of θ(kindly see both the pics in the pdf file). The value of θ will continuously change and so will the value of friction. I'm not able to figure out, why my solution is wrong, if it is wrong .
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