Radial vs Tangential acceleration

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MathewsMD
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I ma having a little bit of trouble distinguishing radial and tangential acceleration.

For example:

The magnitude of the acceleration of a point on a spinning wheel is increased by a factor of 4 if:

A. the magnitudes of the angular velocity and the angular acceleration are each multiplied by a factor of 4
B. the magnitude of the angular velocity is multiplied by a factor of 4 and the angular accel- eration is not changed
C. the magnitudes of the angular velocity and the angular acceleration are each multiplied by a factor of 2
D. the magnitude of the angular velocity is multiplied by a factor of 2 and the angular accel- eration is not changed
E. the magnitude of the angular velocity is multiplied by a factor of 2 and the magnitude of the angular acceleration is multiplied by a factor of 4
ans: E

But if ar = v2/r = ω2r so if angular velocity is multiplied by a factor of 2, this works. But, doesn't αt = ω? So a = α2t2r is also valid, right? Therefore, 2 is also the factor the angular acceleration should be multiplied.

I realize a = αr, but isn't this tangential acceleration and isn't the question assessing radial acceleration?
Any help in differentiating the two types of acceleration would great! Thank you :)
 
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MathewsMD said:
I realize a = αr, but isn't this tangential acceleration
Yes

and isn't the question assessing radial acceleration?

The question is asking about the magnitude of the total (or net) acceleration (with contribution from both the centripetal and tangential acceleration).

[EDIT]
But, doesn't αt = ω? So a = α2t2r is also valid, right? Therefore, 2 is also the factor the angular acceleration should be multiplied.
ω = αt assumes constant angular acceleration. This is not assumed in this problem.
 
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TSny said:
Yes



The question is asking about the magnitude of the total (or net) acceleration (with contribution from both the centripetal and tangential acceleration).

[EDIT]
ω = αt assumes constant angular acceleration. This is not assumed in this problem.

Oh, thank you! So, then using components, the end result would af/ai = (32/2)1/2 and this gives a factor of 4. Exactly what I was looking for!
 
MathewsMD said:
Oh, thank you! So, then using components, the end result would af/ai = (32/2)1/2 and this gives a factor of 4. Exactly what I was looking for!

Since I don't know what your reasoning was that led you to af/ai = (32/2)1/2, I can't say if you worked it correctly. But maybe it's fine.