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An ant rotates its mandible, of length 1.30 mm and mass 130 μg (which we can model as a uniform rod rotated about its end), at a high angular speed. As the tip strikes the ground, it undergoes an angular acceleration of 3.5×108rad/s2.

User J T
by
5.7k points

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

The force on the trip is
1.97*10^(-2)\ N.

Step-by-step explanation:

Given that,

Length = 1.30 mm

Mass = 130 μg

Angular acceleration
\alpha=3.5*10^(8)\ rad/s^2

If we assume that the tip of the mandible hits perpendicular to the ground, what is the force on the tip

We need to calculate the torque

Using formula of torque


\tau=I*\alpha

Put the value of torque and moment of inertia into the formula


F* l=(ML^2)/(3)*\alpha


F=(ML)/(3)*\alpha

Put the value into the formula


F=(130*10^(-9)*1.30*10^(-3))/(3)*3.5*10^(8)


F=0.0197\ N


F=1.97*10^(-2)\ N

Hence, The force on the trip is
1.97*10^(-2)\ N.

User Yashika Garg
by
5.4k points
2 votes

Answer:


1.97*10^(-2) N

Step-by-step explanation:

The expression for torque


\tau=I\alpha

I= moment of inertia and α = angular acceleration

now,


L* F= (ML^2)/(3) \alpha


F= (ML)/(3) \alpha

plugging values we get


F= (130*10^(-9)*1.3*10^(-3))/(3) \3.5*10^8

=
1.97*10^(-2) N

Hence, the required force is
1.97*10^(-2) N

User Starrr
by
6.5k points