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A person stadns on a platform, initially at rest, that can rotate freely without friction. The moment of inertia of the person plus the platform is I_p. The person holds a spinning bicycle wheel with axis horizontal. The wheel has momemnt of inertia I_w and angular velocity \omega_w. What will the angular velocity \omega_p of the platform if the person moves the axis of the wheel so that it points vertically upward.
Using conservation of momentum:
According to my book though,
Is it just me, or is my book on crack?
Using conservation of momentum:
\vec{L}_w = \vec{L'}_w + \vec{L}_p
where\begin{align*}<br />
\vec{L}_w &= (I_w\omega_w, 0)\\<br />
\vec{L'}_w &= (0, I_w\omega_w)\\<br />
\vec{L}_p &= I_p\vec{\omega}_p = I_p(\omega_1, \omega_2)<br />
\end{align}
Solving for \omega_1 and \omega_2 gives\begin{align*}<br />
\omega_1 &= \frac{I_w\omega_w}{I_p}\\<br />
\omega_2 &= -\frac{I_w\omega_w}{I_p}<br />
\end{align}
And since \omega_p = \sqrt{\omega_1^2 + \omega_2^2} then\omega_p = \frac{\sqrt{2}I_w\omega_w}{I_p}
According to my book though,
\omega_p = \frac{I_w\omega_w}{I_p}
Is it just me, or is my book on crack?