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A Ferris wheel is moving at an initial angular velocity of 1.0 rev/59 s. If the operator then brings it to a stop in 3.1 min, what is the angular acceleration of the Ferris wheel

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:


\alpha = 5.7 * 10^(-4) rad/s^2

Step-by-step explanation:

Given


w_0 = 1.0/59 \ rev/s initial angular velocity


t = 3.1\ min -- Initial time


w = 0 --- final angular velocity (when the wheel stops)

Required:

Determine the angular acceleration (
\alpha)

The angular is calculated using the following formula


w = w_0 + \alpha * t

Convert time to seconds:


t = 3.1\ min


t = 3.1 * 60s


t = 186s

Convert angular velocity to rad/s


w_0 = 1.0/59\ rev/s


w_0 = (1)/(59) * 6.283rad/s


w_0 = (6.283)/(59)\ rad/s

Substitute in the required values, the expression becomes:


w = w_0 + \alpha * t


0 = (6.283)/(59) + \alpha * 186


0 = (6.283)/(59)+ 186\alpha

Collect Like Terms


186\alpha = -(6.283)/(59)

Make
\alpha the subject


\alpha = (6.283)/(59 * 186)


\alpha = (6.283)/(10974)


\alpha = 0.00057253508rad/s^2


\alpha = 5.7 * 10^(-4) rad/s^2

User TDrudge
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