Schaum's Outline of College Physics, Twelfth Edition (Schaum's Outlines)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781259587399
Author: Eugene Hecht
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 10, Problem 51SP
A wheel and axle having a total moment of inertia of
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Schaum's Outline of College Physics, Twelfth Edition (Schaum's Outlines)
Ch. 10 - 29. A homogeneous cylinder of radius R and mass m...Ch. 10 - 30. A uniform homogeneous solid disk lies in a...Ch. 10 - 31. A uniform homogeneous solid disk having a...Ch. 10 - 32. Picture a rigid rod of length L having...Ch. 10 - 33. Suppose we put a third tiny sphere of mass m...Ch. 10 - 34. Consider the arrangement in the previous...Ch. 10 - 10.35 [I] A flat uniform homogeneous disk is...Ch. 10 - 10.36 [II] A uniform homogeneous rod of length L...Ch. 10 - 10.37 [II] A uniform homogeneous rod of length L...Ch. 10 - Prob. 38SP
Ch. 10 - 10.39 [I] A force of 200 N acts tangentially on...Ch. 10 - 10.40 [I] An 8.0-kg wheel has a radius of gyration...Ch. 10 - 10.41 [II] Determine the constant torque that must...Ch. 10 - 10.42 [II] A 4.0-kg wheel of 20-cm radius of...Ch. 10 - 10.43 [II] Compute the rotational KE of a 25-kg...Ch. 10 - 10.44 [II] A cord 3.0 m long is wrapped around the...Ch. 10 - 45. A 500-g wheel that has a moment of inertia of...Ch. 10 - 46. When 100 J of work is done on a stationary...Ch. 10 - 47. A 5.0-kg wheel with a radius of gyration of 20...Ch. 10 - 48. An electric motor runs at 900 rpm and delivers...Ch. 10 - 49. The driving side of a belt has a tension of...Ch. 10 - 10.50 [III] A 25-kg wheel has a radius of 40 cm...Ch. 10 - 10.51 [III] A wheel and axle having a total moment...Ch. 10 - 52. A solid uniform homogeneous disk of radius r...Ch. 10 - 53. A 20-kg solid disk (I = Mr2) rolls on a...Ch. 10 - 10.54 [II] A 6.0-kg bowling ball starts from rest...Ch. 10 - 10.55 [II] A tiny solid ball rolls without...Ch. 10 - 10.56 [I] Compute the radius of gyration of a...Ch. 10 - 10.57 [I] Figure 10-13 shows four masses that are...Ch. 10 - 10.58 [I] Determine the moment of inertia (a) of a...Ch. 10 - 10.59 [II] Rod OA in Fig. 10-14 is a meterstick....Ch. 10 - Prob. 60SPCh. 10 - 10.61 [II] A large horizontal disk is rotating on...Ch. 10 - 10.63 [II] A 90-kg person stands at the edge of a...
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- A solid cylinder of mass 2.0 kg and radius 20 cm is rotating counterclockwise around a vertical axis through its center at 600 rev/min. A second solid cylinder of the same mass and radius is rotating clockwise around the same vertical axis at 900 rev/min. If the cylinders couple so that they rotate about the same vertical axis, what is the angular velocity of the combination?arrow_forwardWhy is the following situation impossible? A space station shaped like a giant wheel has a radius of r = 100 m and a moment of inertia of 5.00 108 kg m2. A crew of 150 people of average mass 65.0 kg is living on the rim, and the stations rotation causes the crew to experience an apparent free-fall acceleration of g (Fig. P10.52). A research technician is assigned to perform an experiment in which a ball is dropped at the rim of the station every 15 minutes and the time interval for the ball to drop a given distance is measured as a test to make sure the apparent value of g is correctly maintained. One evening, 100 average people move to the center of the station for a union meeting. The research technician, who has already been performing his experiment for an hour before the meeting, is disappointed that he cannot attend the meeting, and his mood sours even further by his boring experiment in which every time interval for the dropped ball is identical for the entire evening.arrow_forwardA student sits on a freely rotating stool holding two dumbbells, each of mass 3.00 kg (Fig. P10.56). When his arms are extended horizontally (Fig. P10.56a), the dumbbells are 1.00 m from the axis of rotation and the student rotates with an angular speed of 0.750 rad/s. The moment of inertia of the student plus stool is 3.00 kg m2 and is assumed to be constant. The student pulls the dumbbells inward horizontally to a position 0.300 m from the rotation axis (Fig. P10.56b). (a) Find the new angular speed of the student. (b) Find the kinetic energy of the rotating system before and after he pulls the dumbbells inward. Figure P10.56arrow_forward
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Moment of Inertia; Author: Physics with Professor Matt Anderson;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrGhUTeIlWs;License: Standard Youtube License