Centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod?

In summary, the diagram shows that the middle of the rod has a centripetal acceleration of 19600 m/s^2, and it is rotating 0.15 m away from the vertical axis.
  • #1
graphsome
2
0

Homework Statement



Sorry, I don't have a picture, so I can only relate this in words, so I have to indirectly translate it to drawing:

So you have a 0.15 m rod titled at a 45 degree angle above a horizontal , like this: \

Now rotate it some distance away from a vertical axis. The bottom of the rod rotates around a large horizontal rotation axis, and the top rotates around a smaller rotation axis. The MIDDLE of the rod is rotating at 58.33 rev/sec and has a centripetal acceleration of 19600 m/s^2, and it is rotating 0.15 m away from the vertical axis. Now you want to find the acceleration at the top axis, and the acceleration at the bottom axis. The answers: it accelerates between, though I believe not at, 12740 and 26460 m/s^2 (i think for top&bottom respectively, but it could be switched, i forgot). I want to try to find how to GET to these answers.

Homework Equations


a = (2*3.14*f)^2 * r = v^2/r, and f stands for frequency
angular velocity = 2(3.14)f
velocity = 2(3.14)f * r

The Attempt at a Solution



So I assumed that the angular velocity would remain constant, while velocity will change. So the a for the top&bottom ends differ only by radius. To find their radii, I assumed that since the rod is titled upwards at 45 degrees, it is in a square, and 0.15 * sin (45) showed that the distance between the top and bottom of the rod was 0.1061m. The distance of the middle of the rod to the vertical axis was .15 - x. I found x to be half of 0.1061m when I drew it out, so 0.09695 is the radius of the top (smaller) horizontal rotation axis, and 0.09695 + 0.1061 = 0.20307 was the radius of the bottom axis.

However, when I plug these values in I get 13026 (top) and 27279 (bottom), so I made an error somewhere, possibly at the very beginning, though definitely in the trigonometric process.

I also assumed frequency was the same, which seems right but that could be the error. Also apparently, if frequency is the same, the radius of the top is 0.0948m, and the bottom is 0.19697m. How do I get to these values?!
 
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  • #2
Welcome to PF.
I worked it out using ma = F = 4π²mR/T², T = 1/58.33.
I had R = .09697. Final answer a = 13031.
All very close to what you found.
Unless we are both misunderstanding the description, it looks like the given answer is wrong.
 
  • #3
welcome to pf!

hi graphsome! welcome to pf! :smile:

(have an omega: ω and try using the X2 tag just above the Reply box :wink:)
graphsome said:
The MIDDLE of the rod is rotating at 58.33 rev/sec and has a centripetal acceleration of 19600 m/s^2, and it is rotating 0.15 m away from the vertical axis.

no, you must have misunderstood the diagram :redface:

with that frequency and acceleration, r is less than 0.15 …

find it using a = ω2r (which is easier than a = v2/r) :wink:
 
  • #4
r is less than 0.15
I used R = .09697; graphsome used R = .09695. What did you get?
 
  • #5
Hi Delphi51! :smile:

I got 0.146. :confused:
 
  • #6
Ah... that would make sense. 0.15m is indeed just an estimate of 0.14605, which is the true answer (which I did not write down as it was already estimated to be 0.15). This gives 0.0944144m, which still doesn't really makes sense, but it's much closer.

It's too late anyways though, I already submitted the problem online and the values I got were wrong. But i'd still like to know how to get the right answer.
 
  • #7
Very confusing!
has a centripetal acceleration of 19600 m/s^2, and it is rotating 0.15 m away from the vertical axis. Now you want to find the acceleration at the top axis, and the acceleration at the bottom axis.
So was the 0.15 m part of the question or not?
 

Related to Centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod?

1. What is centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod?

Centripetal acceleration is the acceleration that an object experiences when it is moving in a circular path. In the case of a rotating rod, the centripetal acceleration is the acceleration experienced by the ends of the rod as they move in a circular motion around the center point of rotation.

2. How is centripetal acceleration calculated for a rotating rod?

The formula for calculating centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod is a = v^2/r, where a is the centripetal acceleration, v is the linear velocity of the ends of the rod, and r is the radius of the circular path.

3. Does the length of the rotating rod affect the centripetal acceleration?

Yes, the length of the rotating rod does affect the centripetal acceleration. A longer rod will have a larger radius, resulting in a smaller centripetal acceleration, while a shorter rod will have a smaller radius and a larger centripetal acceleration.

4. What factors can affect the centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod?

The factors that can affect the centripetal acceleration at the ends of a rotating rod include the linear velocity of the ends of the rod, the radius of the circular path, and the mass of the rod.

5. What is the difference between centripetal acceleration and tangential acceleration in a rotating rod?

Centripetal acceleration is the acceleration towards the center of the circle, while tangential acceleration is the acceleration in the direction of motion. In a rotating rod, the centripetal acceleration at the ends of the rod is constant, while the tangential acceleration changes as the rod rotates.

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