Sphere rolling down an incline problem.

AI Thread Summary
A uniform solid sphere rolls down a 28° incline without slipping, starting from rest, and travels 6.0 m. The problem involves calculating the angular speed at the bottom using energy conservation principles. The relevant equations include kinetic energy for both linear and rotational motion, and the relationship between linear and angular velocity. The discussion emphasizes the importance of accounting for both translational and rotational kinetic energy, leading to the conclusion that the angular speed can be derived directly from energy balance without needing to find time. The final calculations suggest an angular speed of approximately 37.2 rad/s, correcting for dimensional consistency.
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Homework Statement


A uniform solid sphere, of radius 0.20 m, rolls without slipping 6.0 m down a ramp that is inclined at 28° with the horizontal. What is the angular speed of the sphere at the bottom of the slope if it starts from rest?

Homework Equations


KE=1/2Iw^2
PE=mgh
I don't know what to use for this.

The Attempt at a Solution


Ma = MgSin(28)-Ff[/B]
 
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Hi veg, welcome to PF.
Your attempt at a solution has fallen off the map, and there is some more needed under 2) relevant equations.

I hope you've done a few slip/non slip slope exercises and are familiar with the combination of rolling and accelerating ?

In that case you know that he kinetic energy equation you listed applies to rotation about a stationary axis. Here, however, the axis is moving down the slope, which accounts for a kinetic energy due to linear motion too: KE = 1/2 m v2. So revise the list of eqns and show your attempt at solution , please :)
 

Homework Statement


A uniform solid sphere, of radius 0.20 m, rolls without slipping 6.0 m down a ramp that is inclined at 28° with the horizontal. What is the angular speed of the sphere at the bottom of the slope if it starts from rest?

Homework Equations


w=(theta)/t
a=w/t
v=r(theta)/t
I don't know what to use for this.

The Attempt at a Solution


Acceleration = m(9.81m/s^2)(sin(28)) - Friction
At the end it did 6.0m/2pi(0.20m) revs over the time it took. (4.78rev/t)
from mgh=1/2mv^2+1/2Iw^2 i can get v^2=2gh/(1+I/mr^2)
I have no idea how to find the time from these variables.
 
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Much better!
This way I can ask some pertinent questions that might help you to get going.

##\omega =\Delta \theta/t## is for average angular velocity. Not good here: we have some constant acceleration and some constant angular acceleration, and the coupling is established by the non-slipping condition, which you kind of mention: ##v = \omega r##.

Look up some equations for linear motion with constant acceleration plus some (surprisingly similar-looking) equations for angular motion with constant angular acceleration and see what you can use to get a grip on this nice exercise !

There might even be a shortcut possible: the time isn't asked for, so perhaps an energy balance (more equations still!) gets us to the answer in one fell swoop (provided it's a complete balance...) !
 
Ok i think i got it.
v=rw
x=r(theta)
a=r(angular a)

(9.81)(sin(28))/(0.20)=angular a=23
(theta)=6/0.20=30
w^2=2(23)(30)
[w=37.1] is this correct?
 
Acceleration = m(9.81m/s^2)(sin(28)) - Friction was better ! So ##\alpha## is alittle smaller than you think.

Friction is the one that causes the ball to rotate around its axis. Look up ##\tau = I\alpha## and ##\tau = r \times F##.

At the risk of repeating myself:
Look up some equations for linear motion with constant acceleration plus some (surprisingly similar-looking) equations for angular motion with constant angular acceleration and see what you can use to get a grip on this nice exercise !
 
Ok so what i did to try to find it is i took sin(28)*6 to find the height of at the start which is 2.82m
Then i did mgh=1/2mv^2 + 1/2Iw^2 which worked out to be 2gh=v^2
I got v as 7.438m/s and from that i did v/r=w
so i got w as 37.2m/s
I just need to convert it to rad/s
 
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##mgh = {1\over 2} mv^2 + {1\over 2} I\omega^2\ \Rightarrow \ 2gh = v^2 + I\omega^2/m## is good. That's the energy balance.The ##2gh=v^2## that you worked out misses the rotation part and can't be right.
And then: re dimension: ##v=\omega r##, so with v in m/s and r in m, the quotient is in radians/s, not m/s.Since you have ##v=\omega r## you only need ##I## to crack this one. (No need to go via ##v## if they want ##\omega##)
 
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