Calculating Angular Velocity of a Car with Given Speed and Tire Radius

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the angular velocity of a car traveling at 100 km/h with tires having a radius of 36 cm. The speed of the car is converted to 2777.78 cm/s, which represents the linear distance traveled by the tire in one second. The angular velocity is calculated using the formula Θ = a/r, resulting in 77.16 radians per second. Dividing this value by 2π yields approximately 12.28 revolutions per second, confirming the correct understanding of the relationship between linear speed and angular motion.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of angular velocity and its formulas
  • Knowledge of unit conversion, particularly between kilometers per hour and centimeters per second
  • Familiarity with the concept of arc length in circular motion
  • Basic grasp of radians and their application in rotational dynamics
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the relationship between linear speed and angular velocity in circular motion
  • Learn about the dimensional analysis method for unit conversions
  • Explore the concept of circumference and its role in calculating revolutions
  • Investigate the applications of angular velocity in real-world scenarios, such as automotive engineering
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for physics students, automotive engineers, and anyone interested in understanding the principles of rotational motion and angular velocity calculations.

Anakin_k
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Homework Statement


"A car is traveling at 100 km/h and the tire of the car has a radius of 36cm. Find the number of revolutions per second."

The Attempt at a Solution

100 km/h * (10,000,000 cm/km) * (1h/3600 secs) = 2777.77777778 cm/s is the speed of the car.

Θ = a/r
Θ = (2777.78) / (36)
Θ = 77.16

To find number of revolutions, we must divide by 2pi.

77.16/2pi = 12.28 revolutions/sec. That is the correct answer.

a) I did not get that on the quiz because I do not understand the mechanics behind the operation. Can anyone walk me through each calculation and state why that step is done?
b) And why is 2777.78 cm/s equal to the arc length? Isn't arc length a distance? I thought 2778.78 cm/s was a velocity measurement.

Thank you.
 
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Nevermind, I thought of it quite a bit and I think I've got the concept.

But just to make sure:

First 100 km/h is converted into 2777.78 cm/s. That is the speed at which the tire travels. So basically, every second, it moves 2777.78 cm. This would make it the arc length.

Now we have to look at it in a perspective of ONE SECOND intervals.

So Θ = a/r
Θ = 77.16 is the value of the angle in radians but for ONLY ONE SECOND.

Then we must find out how many times it rotates in one second or how many revolutions it has so we divide that number by 2pi.

Is my understanding correct?
 
Last edited:
Here's how I would write it using the "dimensional unit" method:

\frac {x\ rev}{1 sec}=\frac {100\ km}{1\ hr}\times\frac{1\ hr}{3600\ sec}\times\frac {10^5\ cm}{1\ km}\times\frac {1\ rev}{2\pi 36\ cm}

Each conversion fraction is one expressed in different units and the unwanted units cancel out.
 
So basically you're just converting the units for speed and then dividing by the circumference of the tire, correct?
 
Last edited:

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