A ballerina begins a tour jet (Figure a) with angular speed ωiand a rotational inertia consisting of two parts : role="math" localid="1661005078220" Ileg= 1.44 kg.m2 for her leg extended outward at angle θ= 90.0°to her body and Itrunk= 0.660 kg.m2 for the rest of her body (primarily her trunk). Near her maximum height she holds both legs at angle30.0°to her body and has angular speedωf(Figure b). Assuming that Ihas not changed, what is the ratioωfωi ?

(a) Initial phase of a tour jet: large rotational inertia and small angular speed. (b) Later phase: smaller rotational inertia and larger angular speed.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Ratio of final to initial angular velocities is ωfωi=1.52.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1: Given

Ileg=1.44kg.m2Itrunk=0.660kg.m2

02

Determining the concept

Calculate initial rotational inertia when leg extending at 900and final rotational inertia when leg extending at300. Then, apply law of conservation of momentum to find the ratio of final to initial angular velocities. According tothe conservation of momentum, momentum of a system is constant if no external forces are acting on the system.

Formula are as follow:

  1. Initial angular momentum = Final angular momentum
  2. role="math" localid="1661005530030" Ii=Itrunk+Ileg

Where,Itrunkis moment of inertia of trunk andIlegis moment of inertia of leg

03

Determining the ratio of final to initial angular velocities

Initial rotational inertia when both leg extending 900outward,

Ii=Itrunk+IlegIi=0.660+1.44=2.10kg.m2

Final rotational inertia when both leg extending300 outward,

If=Itrunk+IeffIf=Itrunk+2Ilegsin2(θ)

The factor 2sin2θarises from the fact that there are two legs and each one of them is stretched at an angle 30°. So, effective length from the axis of rotation would be,

leff=L×sinθIeff=mleff2=mL2sin2(θ)Ieff=2mL2sin2(θ)Ieff=2Ilegsin2(θ)

If=0.660+2×1.44sin2(30)=1.38kg.m2

Now, according to law of conservation of momentum,

Li=LfIiωi=Ifωf

Hence,

ωfωi=IiIf=2.101.38=1.52

Hence, ratio of final to initial angular velocities is ωfωi=1.52.

Therefore, the total rotational inertia of the system can be found. Using the law of conservation of momentum, ratio of angular velocities can be found.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

The angularmomental(t). of a particle in four situations are (1)l=3t+4(2)l=-6t2(3l=2(4)l=4/tIn which situation is the net torque on the particle (a) zero, (b) positive and constant, (c) negative and increasing in magnitude (t>0), and (d) negative and decreasing in magnitude (t>0)?

A solid brass cylinder and a solid wood cylinder have the same radius and mass (the wood cylinder is longer). Released together from rest, they roll down an incline. (a) Which cylinder reaches the bottom first, or do they tie? (b) The wood cylinder is then shortened to match the length of the brass cylinder, and the brass cylinder is drilled out along its long (central) axis to match the mass of the wood cylinder.Which cylinder now wins the race, or do they tie?

In Figure, a 30kg child stands on the edge of a stationary merry-go-round of radius2.0mthe rotational inertia of the merry-go-round about its rotation axis is150kg.m2.the child catches a ball of mass1.0kg.thrown by a friend. Just before the ball is caught, it has a horizontal velocityvof magnitude12m/s, at angleφ=37°with a line tangent to the outer edge of the merry-go-round, as shown. What is the angular speed of the merry-go-round just after the ball is caught?

Two disks are mounted (like a merry-go-round) on low-friction bearings on the same axle and can be brought together so that they couple and rotate as one unit. The first disk, with rotational inertia 3.30kg.m2about its central axis, is set spinning counter clockwise at 450rev/min. The second disk, with rotational inertia 6.60kgm2about its central axis, is set spinning counter clockwise at 900rev/min.They then couple together.

(a) What is their angular speed after coupling? If instead the second disk is set spinning clockwise at 900 rev/min,

(b) what are their angular speed?

(c) What are their direction of rotation after they couple together?

In unit-vector notation, what is the net torque about the origin on a flea located at coordinates (0,-4.0m,5.0m)when forces F1=(3.0N)k^and F2=(-2.0N)Jact on the flea?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free