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You accelerate your car from rest at a constant rate down a straight road, and reach 22.0 m/s in 117 s. the tires on your car have radius 0.320 m. assuming the tires rotate in a counterclockwise direction, what is the angular acceleration of the tires?

User Ohid
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1 Answer

3 votes

For this case, the first thing to do is find the linear acceleration of the car.

We have then:


image

Where,

v: speed

t: time

Substituting values we have:


image


image

We are now looking for angular acceleration.

For this, we use the following equation:


\alpha =(a)/(r)

Where,

a: linear acceleration

r: radius of the tires

Substituting values we have:


image


\alpha = 0.59 (rad)/(s^2)

Answer:

The angular acceleration of the tires is:


\alpha = 0.59 (rad)/(s^2)

User Saeida
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