Moment of Inertia/angularvelocity question

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The discussion revolves around calculating the final angular velocity of two cylinders after one drops onto the other. The first cylinder has a moment of inertia of 14.2 kg m² and an angular velocity of 11 rad/s, while the second cylinder has a moment of inertia of 21.4 kg m² and is initially at rest. The conservation of angular momentum principle is applied, leading to the equation Wf = (Ii Wi) / If, where the moment of inertia of the combined system is the sum of both cylinders' moments. The correct total moment of inertia for the system is confirmed to be 35.6 kg m². The discussion emphasizes the importance of using conservation laws and correctly summing moments of inertia in rotational dynamics problems.
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A cylinder with moment of inertia 14.2kg m(squared) rotates with angular velocity 11 rad/s on a frictionless vertical axle. A second cylinder, with moment of inertia 21.4 kg m(squared), initially not rotating, drops onto the first cylinder and remains in contact. Since the surfaces are rough, the two eventually reach the same angular velocity.

Calculate the final angular velocity.

Any pointers on how I could approach this problem?
 
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Pointer: Conservation of Angular Momentum.
 
Thanks for the pointer and sorry for posting in 2 places.

so
Ii Wi = If Wf
Wf = (Ii Wi)/If

Ii = 14.2 kg m2
Wi = 11 rad/s
If = 21.4 kg m2

Is this the correct approach?

also do I need to change any units above?
 
What's the rotational inertia of the combined system of both cylinders?
 
moment of inertia of the combined system will be the sum of the two cylinders...

so Moment of inertia of the system = 14.2 + 21.4

is this correct?
 
That is correct.
 
Thanks for your help
 
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