What is the Torque on a Shoulder Joint Holding a Vacuum Cleaner at an Angle?

In summary, the man is holding an 8.00 kg vacuum cleaner at arm's length, a distance of 0.550 m from his shoulder. The torque on the shoulder joint is 21.6 Nm.
  • #1
sruthis
7
0
Please can someone help me with these two problems:

A man is holding an 8.00 kg vacuum cleaner at arm's length, a distance of 0.550 m from his shoulder. What is the torque on the shoulder joint if the arm is held at 30.0 degrees below the horizontal?


A 15.0 kg child sitting on a playground teeter-totter, 1.50 m from the pivot. What force, applied 0.300 m on the other side of the pivot, is needed to make the child life off the ground?
 
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  • #2
Students are expected to show effort and work out the problems.

What is the formula for a torque?

What is the force (weight) of a 15 kg mass in the Earth's gravity field? What is the moment produced by that force at 1.5 m? The other moment must exceed that moment in order to lift the child.
 
  • #3
oh sorry about that.

1) Well I know that T=Fsin(angle)r
and when I set it up T=(8.00kg x 9.8)(sin 30.0)(0.550m)=21.6 Nm

That is the answer I originally had but according to the sheet I am working from the answer is 37.4 Nm...did I do something wrong in my calculations or in seting up the problem?


2) I=MR^2=(15.0kg)(1.50m)^2=33.75
I am confused as to how to find the moment of the other force...
 
  • #4
Hi sruthis,

For 1) I believe the problem is the angle/trig function you chose. How did you choose sin(30 degrees)?
 
  • #5
well the torque equation uses sin and when you draw out a picture you will notice that sine works best for the Y component of the Force.
 
  • #6
There are several different ways of thinking about how to calculate the torques, so I'm not sure which one you're thinking about.

The definition of a torque that I think they first teach is:

[tex]
\tau =\pm F r \sin\theta
[/tex]

where theta is the angle between the force and the moment arm, and the sign is given by the direction of the torque.

So here the force is vertically downwards, and the moment arm is 30 degrees below the horizontal. What's the angle between those two directions?

(Some other ways of figuring torques is by finding the component of F that is perpendicular to r, or alternatively finding the component of r that is perpendicular to F. They will all give the same answer, of course.)
 
  • #7
Oh i forgot to factor in the perpendicular. Thank you!
 

1. What is torque?

Torque is a measure of the turning force applied to an object. It is calculated as the product of the force applied and the distance from the axis of rotation.

2. How is torque measured?

Torque is typically measured in units of Newton-meters (Nm) in the metric system, or foot-pounds (ft-lb) in the imperial system.

3. What is the equation for torque?

The equation for torque is torque = force x distance. It can also be written as τ = F x r, where τ is torque, F is force, and r is the distance from the axis of rotation.

4. How is torque related to angular acceleration?

Torque and angular acceleration are directly proportional. This means that the greater the torque applied to an object, the greater the resulting angular acceleration will be.

5. Can torque be negative?

Yes, torque can be negative. A negative torque means that the force is causing the object to rotate in the opposite direction than it would with a positive torque.

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