Acceleration of the end of a hinged rod in a pulley system

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around solving a physics problem involving the acceleration of a hinged rod in a pulley system. Participants analyze the equations related to the moment of inertia for both the pulley and the rod, as well as the forces acting on the system. One participant expresses confusion about needing a fifth equation to solve for angular acceleration, while others suggest that only four equations should suffice due to the relationship between the accelerations of the connected components. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between tangential and radial accelerations in the system. Ultimately, the goal is to determine the overall acceleration of the rod's end using the derived equations.
deusy
Messages
10
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


As shown in image.
Screen Shot 2016-10-26 at 10.25.02 PM.png


2. Homework Equations

Moment of inertia of pulley = 1/2*M*R^2
Moment of inertia of rod (about end) = 1/3*M*L^2
Acceleration of end of rod in theta direction = L*α
Acceleration of end of rod in radial direction = L*ω^2

The Attempt at a Solution


Pretty sure this question requires solving a system of five simultaneous equations, but I cannot work out the final one.

Note:
T1 = tension of rope attached to A
T2 = tension of rope attached to B
M = mass
R = radius
α = angular acceleration
ω = angular velocity
Positive movement defined upwards

From free body diagram of block A:

T1- M(A)*g = M(A)*a(A)

From taking the moment around the pulley:

T1*R(pulley)-T2*R(pulley)=I(pulley)*α(pulley)=1/2*M(pulley)*R(pulley)^2*α(pulley)

From taking the moment around the rod:

T2*L-M(rod)*g*L/2=I(rod)*α(rod)=1/3*M(rod)*L^2*α(rod)

From polar coordinates:

a(A) = -R(pulley)*α(pulley)

One equation missing

Once I work out the last equation and solve for α(rod), I should be able to use Pythagoras to work out the magnitude of the acceleration from:

a=((α(rod)*L)^{2}+((L*ω^2)^{2}))^{1/2}

Can anyone see what I'm missing and/or if I'm going wrong in any of the other equations? Been trying this question for hours and can't get my head around it.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
deusy said:
Pretty sure this question requires solving a system of five simultaneous equations, but I cannot work out the final one.

I think there are only four variables so four equations should be enough .

deusy said:
From taking the moment around the rod:

T2*L-M(rod)*g*L/2=I(rod)*α(rod)=1/3*M(rod)*L^2*α(rod)

I guess you have considered anticlockwise positive , in which case you have a sign issue .

Apart from that everything else looks fine :smile: . I hope I am not overlooking something.
 
Vibhor said:
I think there are only four variables so four equations should be enough.
There's five in my equations, unless one I can work out from something else?:
a(A), T1, T2, <br /> α(rod), α(pulley) ?<br />
Otherwise I think I still need a fifth equation.

Thanks for the sign tip, though!
 
deusy said:
There's five in my equations, unless one I can work out from something else?:
a(A), T1, T2,<br /> α(rod), α(pulley) ?<br />
Otherwise I think I still need a fifth equation.

OK .Fair enough .

The tangential acceleration of point B is related to the acceleration of the block .
 
Vibhor said:
The tangential acceleration of point B is related to the acceleration of the block .

Are you implying there's another equation I can get from this?
 
deusy said:
Are you implying there's another equation I can get from this?

Yes .

Replace the rod attached to point B with a mass M .

How would acceleration of block A and mass M be related ?
 
Last edited:
Vibhor said:
How would acceleration of block A and mass M be related ?

Would it be that:
a(A)=-a(B[tangential]) = -L*ω^{2}

As the displacement of A is the negative displacement of B (if considering it B as mass), so a(A)=-a(B) in the tangential direction? This allows me to calculate a(A) without solving simultaneously, which doesn't seem right to me.
 
Yes . The magnitude of tangential acceleration of B should be equal to that of A as they are connected by an inextensible string .

This should give you the answer .

What values are you getting for tangential and radial acceleration of B ?
 
Vibhor said:
Yes . The magnitude of tangential acceleration of B should be equal to that of A as they are connected by an inextensible string .

This should give you the answer .

What values are you getting for tangential and radial acceleration of B ?

I am getting:
a[radial]=7.677 m/s/s
a[tangential] = 6.728 m/s/s

(magnitudes only)

These are not giving me the correct answer for overall acceleration.
 
Last edited:
  • #10
What is the given correct answer ?
 
  • #11
Vibhor said:
What is the given correct answer ?

I won't know it until I get it right unfortunately, this is a question from an online task.
 
  • #12
I am getting 8.938 m/s2 as magnitude of tangential acceleration .
 
  • #13
Vibhor said:
I am getting 8.938 m/s2 as magnitude of tangential acceleration .

I am just doing:
0.8*2.9^2=6.728
 
  • #14
deusy said:
I am just doing:
0.8*2.9^2=6.728

This is radial acceleration .
 
Back
Top