Angular Velocity Homework: Cylinder, 10kg Mass, 50m High

AI Thread Summary
The problem involves a 100 kg cylinder with a radius of 0.5 m, hanging 50 m above the ground, with a 10 kg mass attached to a rope wrapped around it. The initial angular velocity is 0 rad/s, and the force due to gravity on the hanging mass is calculated to be 98 N. The work done by this force as the mass falls is 2450 J, which is equated to the rotational energy of the cylinder. The discussion emphasizes the need to use conservation of energy, leading to the equation mgh = (1/2)Iω² + (1/2)mv², and confirms that the relationship between linear velocity and angular velocity is v = rω. The final calculated angular velocity is approximately 18.07 rad/s.
mollybethe
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Homework Statement



a cylinder, r= 0.5 m with a mass 100 kg which is hanging 50 m above the ground. A rope of negligible mass which is 25 m long is wrapped around the cylinder. At the end of the rope a 10 kg mass is hanging. The hanging mass will fall and the rope will spin off the cylinder. What is ω at that point?

Homework Equations


I=.5MR^2
W=Fd
F=ma
Energy: W=.5Iw^2

The Attempt at a Solution


Initial angular velocity is 0 rad/s
r=.5m
F=ma=10*9.8=98N
W=98*25=2450 J
I=.5*100*.5^2=12.5
2450=.5*12.5w^2
w=19.79rad/s?
 
Last edited:
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welcome to pf!

hi mollybethe! welcome to pf! :smile:

(have an omega: ω and try using the X2 icon just above the Reply box :wink:)
mollybethe said:
Initial angular velocity is 0 rad/s
r=.5m
F=ma=10*9.8=98N
W=98*25=2450 J
I=.5*100*.5^2=12.5
2450=.5*12.5w^2
w=19.79rad/s?

too difficult to read :redface:

use conservation of energy :smile:

(and you'll need an equation relating v and ω)​
 

Homework Equations


I=.5Mr2
Work=Fd
Force=ma
Energy: mgh=.5Iω2

The Attempt at a Solution


Initial angular velocity is 0 rad/s
r=.5m
F=ma=(10)(9.8)=98N
W=(98)(25)=2450 J
I=(.5)(100)(.52)=12.5
2450=(.5)12.5ω2
ω=19.79rad/s---is that even close to right?
 
The gravitational potential energy that comes from the mass descending is going to end up as kinetic energy in both the mass (as its velocity) and the cylinder (as its rotation). Your solution is putting all of the energy into the cylinder, so the rotation rate you're finding is a bit too high.
 
Does that mean I need to use the energy equation:

mgh=Iω2+.5mv2

To find v=at; have to find Xf=.5at2
t=2.26s; v=9.8(2.26)=22.15m/s

(10)(9.8)(25)=(12.5)ω2+.5(10)22.152
but that gives me -.16 for ω2??

Is my mgh correct?
 
Last edited:
Rotational energy is (1/2)Iω2.

Yes, you want to equate the potential energy to the total energy as you surmised:

mgh = (1/2)Iω2 + (1/2)mv2

Now, if you can find a relationship between ω and v, you can replace one of them and solve for for the other.
 
mollybethe said:
v=rω.

But isn't .5mv2 the energy in the falling mass, I wasn't given the radius...

Yes, that's the energy of the falling mass.

The problem statement said, "Imagine a cylinder of radius 0.5 m with a mass of 100 kg". So you have the radius of the cylinder.
 
Can I do that? Can I replace ω with (v/r)? Is it the same velocity? So then my answer would be:

mgh=(1/2)Iω2 + (1/2)mv2

2450=v2(30)

v=9.04 m/s

ω=(9.04/.5)=18.07 rev/s?
 
Yup. That looks fine.

The radius of the cylinder is r, and the rope will be unspooling with velocity v. This is the same as having the circumference of the cylinder rotating with tangential velocity v. So that v = ωr.
 
  • #10
Thank you for your help, it shouldn't be radians/sec, should I convert it?
 
  • #11
mollybethe said:
Thank you for your help, it shouldn't be radians/sec, should I convert it?

Ah, I missed checking your units. Sorry about that. The 18.07 is in radians per second, not revolutions per second. If you want some other units you'll have to convert.
 
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