series111 said:
k ^2= radius of gyration hence k^2 = d^2/8
The equation = (I) moment of inertia = mass x radius of gyration
In that case, I think that your equation is perfectly correct, because the moment of inertia of a thin disc is given by I = (mr
2)/2 = [m(d/2)
2]/2 = [(md
2)/4]/2 = mk
2
series111 said:
I calculated the mass by :
volume = pie dia^2/4 x length = pie 400 x 10 -3m ^2/ 4 x 50x 10-3m = 6.28 x 10-3m
density= mass / volume :
mass= density x volume = 7800 kg/m3 x 6.28 x 10-3m = 48.98 kg
Just FYI, the name of the Greek letter \pi is spelled 'pi.' Of course, that's just a minor point. Your math looks fine. I get 49.01 kg, but that difference is probably attributable to rounding errors. One question: in your calculations, you seem to have used 400 mm as the disk diameter, but you typed 400 m in the original problem statement. Was the latter just a typo?
series111 said:
k ^2= radius of gyration = 400x10-3m^2/8 = 20x10-3m^2
(I)moment of inertia=(M) mass x (K^2) radius of gyration :
(I)moment of inertia =(M) 48.98 kg x (K^2)20x10-3m^2 = 979.6 x 10 ^-3 kgm^2/s
This part in red seems to be an error. There is no 's' in the units. The units for moment of inertia are kgm
2, which should be obvious because you are multiplying something in kg by something in m
2. That having been said, the numerical value seems fine. I also get about 0.980 kgm
2.
series111 said:
angular acceleration = final velocity-initial velocity/time :
angular acceleration = 0-43.98 rad/s / 4sec = 10.99rad/s^2
Torque = moment of inertia x acceleration
: T = 979.6 x 10 ^-3 kgm^2/s x 10.99rad/s^2 = 10.76 Nm
Applied torque = total torque - frictional torque = 10.76 Nm - 1.5 Nm = 9.26 Nm
All of this looks okay. I got 10.77 Nm for the total required torque, but that can be attributed to our slightly different numbers and is not a big deal.
series111 said:
i have also looked at Question (b) and found the equation:
time = 2 pie square root mass / force
Again, dimensional analysis is your friend. Mass/force has dimensions of acceleration
-1, right? Therefore, (mass/force)
1/2 has dimensions of (acceleration)
-1/2 = (time
2/length)
1/2 = (time/(length)
1/2). Therefore, your equation cannot be correct, because it does not give a result having dimensions of time.
series111 said:
so i have calculated 2 pie square root 48.98 kg/ 10.76 Nm = 13.4 secs
is this the correct formula or am i totally wrong..
It seems that you're still not getting a very important point. When I say include units in your calculations, I don't mean to just manually put in whatever units you think ought to be there (which is what you did on the right-hand side of the calculation above). I mean actually work out what a kg/(Nm) is, and put that in the result. If you had done so, you would have realized that the answer is not a second, and therefore something must be wrong. By the way, not only is this equation incorrect, but you have also applied it incorrectly, because you used the torque, and torque is not the same thing as force. I'm sorry if it sounds like I'm being harsh or nitpicky, but paying attention to what physical quantities are on either side of an equation and whether they are consistent is really going to help you in the future. You could have caught these errors by being a little bit more careful with units.
So how to actually calculate the stopping time? Remember in part (a) how you were
given a stopping time and a required change in angular velocity, and you used that to determine the angular acceleration, and hence the required torque? Well, did it ever occur to you that you could just do the same thing, only "backwards?" This time the torque is given, and hence the angular acceleration. Therefore, given that, and the required change in angular velocity, you can calculate the require stopping time. In other words, the exact same physics is being used. The only change between parts (a) and (b) is which quantities are given vs. which ones you have to solve for.