Angular Speed of a star collapse

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the angular speed of a neutron star formed from a collapsing star, with the original star having a radius of 9.0×10^5 km and the final radius being 16 km. The original star's rotation period was 31 days, leading to an initial angular speed of approximately 288770.73 rad/s. Participants debated whether the mass of the star changes during the collapse, with some suggesting that the density increase does not necessarily imply a mass change. The conservation of angular momentum is emphasized, leading to the conclusion that the mass can be assumed constant for the calculations. Ultimately, the simpler approach, which assumes no mass change, yields the correct angular speed, indicating that the additional density information may not be essential for solving the problem.
Heat
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Homework Statement



Under some circumstances, a star can collapse into an extremely dense object made mostly of neutrons and called a neutron star. The density of a neutron star is roughly 10^{14} times as great as that of ordinary solid matter. Suppose we represent the star as a uniform, solid, rigid sphere, both before and after the collapse. The star's initial radius was 9.0×10^5 km (comparable to our sun); its final radius is 16 km.

If the original star rotated once in 31 days, find the angular speed of the neutron star.


The Attempt at a Solution



Rotation of Original Star: (31 days/rev)(86400s/1day)(1rev/2pi) = 288770.73 rad/s

My first attempt was proportions :rolleyes:

[(288770.72 rad/s) / (9.0x10^5 km)] = [(w)/(16km)]

w = 5.13x10^10 :confused:
 
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Conservation of angular momentum
 
but all that I am given is that the density is 10^14 greater than the before scenario.
 
Heat said:
but all that I am given is that the density is 10^14 greater than the before scenario.

Density is mass divided by volume.

The original density is \rho_0=\frac{m_0}{V_0}

The new density is \rho_1=\frac{m_1}{V_1}=10^{14}\rho_0=10^{14}\frac{m_0}{V_0}
 
Also, I_0\omega_0=I_1\omega_1

Rearranging:

\omega_1=\frac{I_0\omega_0}{I_1}

What is I for a sphere?

I=\frac{2}{5} m r^2

Now let's combine the equations:

\frac{m_0 r_0^2\omega_0}{m_1 r_1^2}=\omega_1

Now to write mass in terms of density:

m=\rho V

And you know the following:

\rho_1=\frac{m_1}{V_1}=10^{14}\rho_0=10^{14}\frac{ m_0}{V_0}

Rearranging:

\frac{m_0}{m_1}=10^{-14}\frac{V_0}{V_1}

Now that can be substituted in the other equation, giving:

10^{-14}\omega_0\frac{V_0 r_0^2}{V_1 r_1^2}=\omega_1
 
u have ur math wrong (1rev/31days)(1day/86400s)(2PIrad/1rev)= answer.. <-- Wo
 
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And the volume of a sphere is \frac{4}{3}\pi r^3

V_0=\frac{4}{3}\pi r_0^3

V_1=\frac{4}{3}\pi r_1^3

\frac{V_0}{V_1}=\frac{r_0^3}{r_1^3}
 
10^{-14}\omega_0\frac{r_0^5}{r_1^5}=\omega_1
 
ahh exactly, nice.. and if u read above, i explain how to solve for Wo. Wo=(1rev/31days)(1day/86400s)(2PIrad/1rev)
 
  • #10
wo = 2.35x10^-6

10^-14 ( .00000235)[(9.0x10^5)^5/(16)^5] = 13233.68

In two sig figs: 1.3 x 10 ^ 4

which is incorrect :O
 
  • #11
It says the density increases. That does not (necessarily) mean the mass changes. I think you can assume that the mass is the same before and after the collapse.
 
  • #12
the thing is, there is a good possibility that the mass will change.. because the density AND the radius changes... i=initial f=final
Pi=Mass(i)/Volume(i) Pf= (10^14)Pi ... now if we were to assume that masses are the same.. then let's call mass=x
Pi=X/(4pi/3(9.0×10^5 km)^3) Pf= (X/(4pi/3(16)^3)) we know that Pf/Pi=(10^14)
(X/(4pi/3(16)^3)) / (X/(4pi/3(9.0×10^5 km)^3)) must = to 10^14
after doing the math (the X's cancel out)
it comes out to be 1.8x10^14.. so masses must change
 
  • #13
so masses do change, but it seems that Bill Foster already took that into account and simplified it to post #8 equation.

yet I went wrong somewhere. :(
 
  • #14
I'm just saying if the "mass changing approach" doesn't give the right answer, maybe the simpler approach is what the question is really asking for. I think the 10^14 may just be extra information that is not needed to solve the problem.

You have I_o \omega_o = I_f \omega_f

where

I_o = \frac{2}{5}MR_o^2
I_f = \frac{2}{5}MR_f^2 assume the total mass stays constant.

You have \omega_o

So put everything together, the mass cancels and you find \omega_f

I could be wrong, of course. But did you at least try it this way to see what answer you get?
 
  • #15
hage567 said:
I'm just saying if the "mass changing approach" doesn't give the right answer, maybe the simpler approach is what the question is really asking for. I think the 10^14 may just be extra information that is not needed to solve the problem.

You have I_o \omega_o = I_f \omega_f

where

I_o = \frac{2}{5}MR_o^2
I_f = \frac{2}{5}MR_f^2 assume the total mass stays constant.

You have \omega_o

So put everything together, the mass cancels and you find \omega_f

I could be wrong, of course. But did you at least try it this way to see what answer you get?
Maybe.. but its unlikely.. because the question wouldn't go into so much details about density.
 
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  • #16
if Heat gets the right answer using the "no mass change approach" then..well... I would say that the book/question is "technically" wrong.

However, there is some chance that Heat plugged the numbers incorrectly.. or something.. I am not sure.. let's see if Heat gets the right answer.
 
  • #17
I know this is a very old post, but using hage567's method works. The mass does not change, and using his expression gives the correct answer.
 
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