How Do You Solve a Rotating Reference Frame Problem in Physics?

natalie
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Homework Statement

I have attached the problem as a picture on this post, am really really unsure on how to start!

so far the only thing i can think of doing is using this equation

(\frac{d^{2}r}{dt^{2}})_{s} = ( \frac{d^{2}r}{dt^{2}})_{s'} + 2ω \times (\frac{dr}{dt})_{s'} + \dot{ω} \times r + ω \times [ω \times r]And now just solve for r, but in the s reference frame ?

any help appreciated really stuck.
 

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Not even part (i)?
 
voko said:
Not even part (i)?

No, I don't see how it works?
 
Assume that the rod is pointing momentarily north.

What forces acting on the bead, in the inertial frame, can you think of? What are their directions?
 
Hm, I must admit that I always have trouble using forces to derive the equations of motion. If you have Hamilton's principle at hand, it's way simpler to use the Euler-Lagrange equations and then work out the forces at the very end ;-)).
 
vanhees71 said:
then work out the forces at the very end ;-)).

That's cheeeeeating! :)
 
voko said:
Assume that the rod is pointing momentarily north.

What forces acting on the bead, in the inertial frame, can you think of? What are their directions?

so basically, if i understand correctly, the rod is lying in the x' axis. we have a weight force, and a normal force. that's in the intertial reference frame? the weight force cancels out the normal...
 
natalie said:
so basically, if i understand correctly, the rod is lying in the x' axis. we have a weight force, and a normal force. that's in the intertial reference frame? the weight force cancels out the normal...

If the weight canceled the normal force, the bead would have zero resultant force acting on it. What it is the motion under zero resultant force? Does that seem plausible in the situation at hand?
 
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