Calculating Angular Momentum of a Rotating Disk with a Point Mass on the Rim

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the angular momentum of a system consisting of a rotating disk and a point mass (a woman) located on its rim. The problem involves concepts from rotational dynamics, specifically the moment of inertia and angular momentum.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the conversion of angular velocity and the calculation of moment of inertia for both the disk and the point mass. There are questions about the treatment of the woman as a point mass and the implications of her mass on the system's total moment of inertia.

Discussion Status

Some participants have pointed out potential errors in the original calculations, particularly regarding the moment of inertia terms. Others are exploring the implications of treating the woman as a point mass versus a hollow cylinder and discussing how to properly account for her mass in relation to the disk.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of a program that provides feedback on the calculations, indicating that the original poster's answer was deemed incorrect. Participants are also reflecting on their understanding of the moment of inertia and the assumptions made in the problem setup.

ph123
Messages
41
Reaction score
0
A woman with a mass of 45.0 kg is standing on the rim of a large disk that is rotating at an angular velocity of 0.490 rev/s about an axis through its center. The disk has a mass of 120 kg and a radius of 4.50 m. Calculate the magnitude of the total angular momentum of the woman-plus-disk system. (Assume that you can treat the woman as a point.)

Ok, well I first converted rev/s into rad/s.

0.490 rev/s * 2(pi) = 3.079 rad/s

Next I determined that the moment of inertia for a disk is

(1/2)mr^2

Next I used the equation for angular momentum:

L = I(omega)
= [(1/2)mr^2]omega
= [(1/2)(120 kg + 45 kg)(4.50m)^2]*3.079 rad/s
= 5143.8 kg m^2/s

This one seemed really straightforward to me, but the program I use for physics says the answer isn't right. Anyone know what I did wrong?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I believe you omitted the radius squared term for the disk in your next to last eqn.
 
denverdoc said:
I believe you omitted the radius squared term for the disk in your next to last eqn.

Aside from the fact that one should never treat women as points, I think the problem is that she has a factor of (1/2) on her. Her moment of inertia is m*r^2.
 
Dick said:
Aside from the fact that one should never treat women as points, I think the problem is that she has a factor of (1/2) on her. Her moment of inertia is m*r^2.

right, they hate to be treated as point objects. :mad:

You're right I didn't see that the R^2 was factored out, and the 1/2 also factored. Its funny you get used to seeing things presented a certain way the errors in perception one can make at a glance. I even looked twice.
 
denverdoc said:
right, they hate to be treated as point objects. :mad:

You're right I didn't see that the R^2 was factored out, and the 1/2 also factored. Its funny you get used to seeing things presented a certain way the errors in perception one can make at a glance. I even looked twice.

I've looked more than twice and still been wrong. See my most recent fiasco in thermodynamics...
 
How is the woman mr^2. Is she considered a hollow cylinder? If so, then, I have to add the momentum of the disk itself and then the momentum of her separately? How do account for the fact that she is on the disk, such that the disk is heavier with her on it?
 
Point mass I=mR^2 which you are advised to treat her as, this eqn is one of the few moment of inertias that follows immediately from its definition
 
ph123 said:
How is the woman mr^2. Is she considered a hollow cylinder? If so, then, I have to add the momentum of the disk itself and then the momentum of her separately? How do account for the fact that she is on the disk, such that the disk is heavier with her on it?

The disk isn't 'heavier'. It just has a normal force acting on it - which doesn't affect its moment of inertia. The moment of inertia of the hollow cylinder and a point mass are both mr^2 for the same reason - all of their mass is concentrated at the rim.
 
ive got this same question, and i am clueless on where to go
 
  • #10
Just add the moments of inertia of the point-woman and the disk and multiply by the angular velocity. If that's not enough of a clue, then I'd suggest you repost the question so others can help. Resurrecting old threads is a bad idea. They have too much confusing baggage attached.
 
  • #11
ph123 said:
... but the program I use for physics says the answer isn't right. ...
Hello Ph123

What is the program you use for physics?

C
 
  • #12
they are both mr^2 right?
 

Similar threads

Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
26
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
3K
  • · Replies 45 ·
2
Replies
45
Views
4K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
2K
  • · Replies 17 ·
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
1K
Replies
9
Views
3K