What Happens to Angular Speed When You Move on a Merry-Go-Round?

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When a student moves towards the center of a spinning merry-go-round, the system's angular momentum remains constant, as no external forces are acting on it. The total moment of inertia is calculated by summing the moment of inertia of the merry-go-round and the student, treated as a point mass. As the student moves inward, their moment of inertia decreases, leading to an increase in angular speed to conserve angular momentum. The new angular speed can be found by dividing the initial angular momentum by the updated moment of inertia. This principle is similar to the behavior of a spinning ice skater who increases speed by pulling in their limbs.
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:confused: I worked on this problem in class and i couldn't finish it i did half of it but i couldnt' figure out some of it.
A 65 kg student is spinning on a playground merry-go-round that has a mass of 5.25 x 10^2 and a radius of 2.00 m. she walks from the edge of the merry-go-round tward the center. if the angular speed of the merry-go-rounf is initially .20 rad/sec, what is it's angular speed when the student reaches a point .50 m from teh center? (assume that the merry-go-round is a solid disk and the person is a point source)
 
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You find your moment of inertia by summing. The moment of inertia for a spinning disk winds up being:

I_d=\frac{mr^2}{2}

The student could be considered a point mass, his moment of inertia is:

I_s=mr^2

You add the two together to get your total moment of inertia.

Angular momentum is equal to:

H=I\omega
with omega being you angular velocity (or angular speed)

Angular momentum stays constant unless an external force acts on it. The student walking closer to the center is not an external force. The student and merry-go-round are part of the same system.

Recalculate the student's new moment of inertia in his new position. Add it to the merry-go-round's moment of inertia.

Divide the angular momentum by the new moment of inertia to get your new angular velocity.

Thinking of what happens when a spinning ice skater brings their arms and legs in tight gives you a common sense check as to whether your answer is at least feasible.
 
Thank you!
 
The book claims the answer is that all the magnitudes are the same because "the gravitational force on the penguin is the same". I'm having trouble understanding this. I thought the buoyant force was equal to the weight of the fluid displaced. Weight depends on mass which depends on density. Therefore, due to the differing densities the buoyant force will be different in each case? Is this incorrect?

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