Merry-go-round angular momentum conservation?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the conservation of angular momentum in a playground merry-go-round scenario. The merry-go-round has a moment of inertia of 230 kgm² and an initial angular speed of 10.0 rev/min. When a 23.0 kg child hops onto the edge, the new moment of inertia becomes 257.6 kgm². Using the conservation of angular momentum, the new angular speed is calculated to be approximately 8.75 rev/min.

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Jacob87411
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A playground merry-go-round of radius R = 1.20 m has a moment of inertia I = 230 kgm2 and is rotating at 10.0 rev/min about a frictionless vertical axle. Facing the axle, a 23.0 kg child hops onto the merry-go-round and manages to sit down on its edge. What is the new angular speed of the merry-go-round?

Little bit of a problem with this one. How does the moment of inertia change when the 23 kg child steps on...Do you need to use angular momentum conservation?
 
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Jacob87411 said:
How does the moment of inertia change when the 23 kg child steps on...
Treat the child as a particle. (What's the moment of inertia of particle at a distance from an axis?) Just add the child's moment of inertia to that of the merry-go-round.

Do you need to use angular momentum conservation?
Yes.
 
So the moment of inertia for a particle is Mi*ri = (23)(1.2)=27.6

So I of the system is (230+27.6)=257.6. So now we take conservation of angular momentum:

L initial = L Final
L Initial = I*angular speed = 230*1.05 (10 rev/min = 20pi/min = 1.05rad/s?)
L Final = 257.6*angular speed, so we set this equal to each other

230*1.05 = 257.6w
w=.9375?
 
Jacob87411 said:
So the moment of inertia for a particle is Mi*ri = (23)(1.2)=27.6
No. Does this expression even have the right units for moment of inertia?
 
whoops, r should be squared right...so (23)(1.2^2) = 33.12

So 230(1.05)=263.12w
w=,874?
 
Right sorry I always forget..it says I am off by a power of 10, why is this
 
Jacob87411 said:
whoops, r should be squared right...so (23)(1.2^2) = 33.12
Right. But be sure to include proper units when stating a physical quantity.

So 230(1.05)=263.12w
w=,874?
Check your arithmetic. Also, why not express the new angular speed in the same units as the original?
 
oh wow whoops so w=.917 so converting back we take (.17 * 60)/2*pi giving 8.75 rev/min. Thanks for the help
 

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