Rotational speed of the minute hand of a watch

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the rotational speed of a watch's minute hand and the time it takes to complete one revolution. The minute hand's speed is determined to be pi/1800 rad/s, based on its angular displacement over time. When a wheel turns at 3.0 rads/s, it completes approximately 0.477 revolutions per second, leading to a calculation of 2.094 seconds per revolution. The participants clarify that to find the time for one revolution, the inverse of the speed must be taken. The conversation concludes with a correction regarding the initial misunderstanding of the time calculation.
blackout85
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If a wheel is turning at 3.0 rads/s, the time it takes to complete one revolution is about:

3.0 rads/s X 1 revolution/6.28 rads = .477 revolutions/s
now do I just times by 60s to cancel the seconds out to get 1 revolution.


The rotational speed of the minute hand of a watch is:

w= anglular displacement/ time
w=2pi radian in a circle/ 3600 seconds in one rotation --> pi/1800 rad/s
is that right?
 
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blackout85 said:
If a wheel is turning at 3.0 rads/s, the time it takes to complete one revolution is about:

3.0 rads/s X 1 revolution/6.28 rads = .477 revolutions/s
now do I just times by 60s to cancel the seconds out to get 1 revolution.
No, that would give the number of revolutions in 60 seconds. How do you think you can get an answer in seconds/revolution?

blackout85 said:
The rotational speed of the minute hand of a watch is:

w= anglular displacement/ time
w=2pi radian in a circle/ 3600 seconds in one rotation --> pi/1800 rad/s
is that right?
How many seconds in a minute?
 
For the first problem I just want the answer in seconds, not seconds/revolutions

I put 3600 seconds because it is the amount of time for the minute hand to make one full revolution around the clock
 
blackout85 said:
For the first problem I just want the answer in seconds, not seconds/revolutions
Understood. If the wheel makes 0.477 revolutions in 1 second, then the time it takes to make 1 rev is 1/0.477 = 2.094 seconds. You need to take the inverse of the speed (that gives sec/rev) and multiply by the number of revolutions (in this case 1).
blackout85 said:
I put 3600 seconds because it is the amount of time for the minute hand to make one full revolution around the clock
Oops, that's my mistake! :blushing: Your answer is correct.
 
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