Calculating the Speed of a Spinning Wheel for Engineering Students

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To calculate the speed of a spinning wheel, one must consider the force applied, the point of application for torque, the duration of the force, and the moment of inertia of the wheel. The speed of the wheel is defined as its rate of rotation, with angular momentum being the product of angular speed and angular inertia. For linear speed at the perimeter, the formula is angular speed in radians per second multiplied by the radius. Key equations include torque (T = f * L), acceleration (a = T * I), and speed (s = a * t). A specific example would require detailed information about the wheel's moment of inertia, which can be complex due to irregular geometries.
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How would I calculate the speed of a spinning wheel (using forces in Newton and anything else required)?
 
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How would you calculate the linear speed of an object moving in a straight line?

(seriously, we need more details about where you're starting from!)
 
Take a roulette wheel. How would you calculate the speed of the spinning when the roulette wheel is spinned from the middle (by hand)?
 
You need the force, the point at which the force is applied (to get the torque), the duration for which the force is applied and the moment of inertia of the wheel.
 
Could you please give me an example?
Physics in The Netherlands have a couple of different declarations, but I'll figure it out with an example of your explanation.
 
The "speed" of a wheel is it's rate of rotation. The angular inertia depends on the distribution of mass around the center of rotation. Angular momentum is the angular rate of rotation (angular speed) times the angular inertia. If you want to know how fast the wheels perimeter is moving linearly, it's the angular speed in radians per second times the radius.
 
T=f*L
s=a*t
a=T*I
So...
s=f*L*I*t

f=force
L=lever arm length
a=acceleration
s=speed
T=torque
t=time
I=moment of inertia

If i were setting up a problem for a first year engineering student to solve, it would require those equations (it may also include the appropriate equation for moment of inertia). But if you're actually interested in a real world situation, then this is probably nowhere near specific enough to help you. But without more information about the problem you are trying to solve, there isn't much we can do. For example, I have no idea what the moment of inertia of a roulette wheel is and no way to solve for it because the geometry of the wheel is irregular.
 
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