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A potter’s wheel moves from rest to an angular speed of 0.50 rev/s in 28.9 s. Assuming constant angular acceleration, what is its angular acceleration in rad/s2 ? Answer in units of rad/s 2 .

User Lmwangi
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2 Answers

3 votes

Final answer:

The angular acceleration of the potter's wheel is 0.109 rad/s².

Step-by-step explanation:

The formula to calculate angular acceleration is:

angular acceleration (α) = ωf - ωi / t


Where:

ωf is the final angular velocity


ωi is the initial angular velocity


t is the time taken to reach the final angular velocity


In this case, the initial angular velocity (ωi) is 0 (as the wheel starts from rest), the final angular velocity (ωf) is 0.50 rev/s, and the time (t) is 28.9 s. Substituting these values into the formula:


α = 0.50 rev/s - 0 / 28.9 s = 0.50 rev/s / 28.9 s = 0.0173 rev/s²


To convert rev/s² to rad/s², we multiply by 2π (since 1 revolution = 2π radians):


α = 0.0173 rev/s² × 2π rad/rev = 0.109 rad/s²


Therefore, the angular acceleration of the potter's wheel is 0.109 rad/s².

User Shimon Amit
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5.3k points
7 votes

Answer:

0.108 rad/s².

Step-by-step explanation:

Given that

Initial angular velocity ,ωi = 0 rad/s

Final angular velocity ωf= 0.5 rev/s

We know that

1 rev/s = 6.28 rad/s

ωf= 3.14 rad/s

t= 28.9 s

We know that (if acceleration is constant)

ωf=ωi + α t

α=Angular acceleration

3.14 = 0 + α x 28.9


\alpha=(3.14)/(28.9)\ rad/s^2\\\alpha=0.108\ rad/s^2

Therefore the acceleration will be 0.108 rad/s².

Therefore the answer will be 0.108 rad/s².

User Srikanth Nakka
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5.2k points