University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780321973610
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 10.4, Problem 10.4TYU
You apply equal torques to two different cylinders. Cylinder 1 has a moment of inertia twice as large as cylinder 2. Each cylinder is initially at rest. After one complete rotation, which cylinder has the greater kinetic energy? (i) Cylinder 1; (ii) cylinder 2; (iii) both cylinders have the same kinetic energy.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
You apply equal torques to two different cylinders. Cylinder 1 has a moment of inertia twice as large as cylinder 2. Each cylinder is initially at rest. After one complete rotation, which cylinder has the greater kinetic energy? (i) Cylinder 1; (ii) cylinder 2; (iii) both cylinders have the same kinetic energy.
A lawnmower engine brings a 1 m-long by 0.1 m-wide cutting blade of mass 2.55 kg from rest to an angular speed of 1800 rpm in 1.27 seconds. What is the average power supplied by the engine during this period?
2910 W
2940 W
2970 W
3000 W
3030 W
Consider a basketball player spinning a ball on the tip of a finger. If such a player performs 1.93 J of work to set the ball spinning from rest, at what angular speed will the ball rotate? Model a basketball as a thin‑walled, hollow sphere. For men's basketball, the ball has a circumference of 74.9 cm and a mass of 624 g.
Chapter 10 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics (14th Edition)
Ch. 10.1 - The accompanying figure shows a force P being...Ch. 10.2 - The figure shows a glider of mass m1 that can...Ch. 10.3 - Suppose the solid cylinder used as a yo-yo in...Ch. 10.4 - You apply equal torques to two different...Ch. 10.5 - A ball is attached to one end of a piece of...Ch. 10.6 - If the polar ice caps were to melt completely due...Ch. 10.7 - Suppose the mass of the flywheel in Fig. 10.34 is...Ch. 10 - Can a single force applied to a body change both...Ch. 10 - Suppose you could use wheels of any type in the...Ch. 10 - Serious bicyclists say that if you reduce the...
Ch. 10 - The harder you hit the brakes while driving...Ch. 10 - When an acrobat walks on a tightrope, she extends...Ch. 10 - When you turn on an electric motor, it takes...Ch. 10 - The work done by a force is the product of force...Ch. 10 - A valued client brings a treasured ball to your...Ch. 10 - You make two versions of the same object out of...Ch. 10 - Two identical masses are attached to frictionless...Ch. 10 - The force of gravity acts on the baton in Fig....Ch. 10 - A certain solid uniform bail reaches a maximum...Ch. 10 - A wheel is rolling without slipping on a...Ch. 10 - A hoop, a uniform solid cylinder, a spherical...Ch. 10 - A ball is rolling along al speed without slipping...Ch. 10 - You are standing at the center of a large...Ch. 10 - Global Warming. If the earths climate continues to...Ch. 10 - It two spinning objects have the same angular...Ch. 10 - A student is sitting on a frictionless rotating...Ch. 10 - A point particle travels in a straight line at...Ch. 10 - In Example 10.10 (Section 10.6) the angular speed ...Ch. 10 - In Example 10.10 (Section 10.6) the rotational...Ch. 10 - As discussed in Section 10.6, the angular momentum...Ch. 10 - If you stop a spinning raw egg for the shortest...Ch. 10 - A helicopter has a large main rotor that rotates...Ch. 10 - In a common design for a gyroscope, the flywheel...Ch. 10 - A gyroscope is precessing about a vertical axis....Ch. 10 - A gyroscope takes 3.8 s to precess 1.0 revolution...Ch. 10 - A gyroscope is precessing as in Fig. 10.32. What...Ch. 10 - A bullet spins on its axis as it emerges from a...Ch. 10 - Calculate the torque (magnitude and direction)...Ch. 10 - Calculate the net torque about point O for the two...Ch. 10 - A square metal plate 0.180m on each side is...Ch. 10 - Three forces are applied to a wheel of radius...Ch. 10 - One force acting on a machine part is...Ch. 10 - A metal bar is in the xy-plane with one end of the...Ch. 10 - A machinist is using a wrench lo loosen a nut. The...Ch. 10 - A uniform disk with mass 40.0 kg and radius 0.200...Ch. 10 - The flywheel of an engine has moment of inertia...Ch. 10 - A cord is wrapped around ihe rim of a solid...Ch. 10 - A machine part has the shape of u solid uniform...Ch. 10 - CP A stone is suspended from the free end of a...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.13ECh. 10 - CP A 15.0-kg bucket of water is suspended by a...Ch. 10 - A wheel rotates without friction about a...Ch. 10 - A 12.0-kg box resting on a horizontal,...Ch. 10 - A 2.20-kg hoop 1.20 m in diameter is rolling to...Ch. 10 - BIO Gymnastics. We can roughly model a gymnastic...Ch. 10 - What fraction of the total kinetic energy is...Ch. 10 - A siring is wrapped several times around the rim...Ch. 10 - A solid ball is released from rest and slides down...Ch. 10 - A hollow, spherical shell with mass 2.00 kg rolls...Ch. 10 - A 392-N wheel comes off a moving truck and rolls...Ch. 10 - A uniform marble rolls down a symmetrical bowl,...Ch. 10 - A thin, light string is wrapped around the outer...Ch. 10 - A Ball Rolling Uphill. A bowling ball rolls...Ch. 10 - A size-5 soccer ball of diameter 22.6 cm and mass...Ch. 10 - A size-5 soccer ball of diameter 22.6 cm and mass...Ch. 10 - A playground merry-go-round has radius 2.40 m and...Ch. 10 - An engine delivers 175 hp to an aircraft propeller...Ch. 10 - A 2.80-kg grinding wheel is in the form of a solid...Ch. 10 - An electric motor consumes 9.00 kJ of electrical...Ch. 10 - (a) Compute the torque developed by an industrial...Ch. 10 - An airplane propeller is 2.08 m in length (from...Ch. 10 - A 2.00-kg rock has a horizontal velocity of...Ch. 10 - A woman with mass 50 kg is standing on the rim of...Ch. 10 - Find the magnitude of the angular momentum of the...Ch. 10 - (a) Calculate the magnitude of the angular...Ch. 10 - CALC A hollow, thin-walled sphere of mass 12.0 kg...Ch. 10 - CP A small block on a frictionless, horizontal...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.41ECh. 10 - A diver comes off a board with arms straight up...Ch. 10 - The Spinning Figure Skater. The outstretched hands...Ch. 10 - A solid wood door 1.00 m wide and 2.00 m high is...Ch. 10 - A large wooden turntable in the shape of a flat...Ch. 10 - Asteroid Collision! Suppose that an asteroid...Ch. 10 - Prob. 10.47ECh. 10 - A thin uniform rod has a length of 0.500 m and is...Ch. 10 - A thin, uniform metal bar. 2.00 m long and...Ch. 10 - A uniform. 4.5-kg, square, solid wooden gate 1.5 m...Ch. 10 - The rotor (flywheel) of a loy gyroscope has mass...Ch. 10 - A Gyroscope on the Moon. A certain gyroscope...Ch. 10 - Stabilization of the Hubble Space Telescope. The...Ch. 10 - A 50.0-kg grindstone is a solid disk 0.520 m in...Ch. 10 - 10.55A grindstone in the shape of a solid disk...Ch. 10 - A uniform, 8.40-kg, spherical shell 50.0 cm in...Ch. 10 - A thin, uniform. 3.80-kg bar, 80.0 cm long, has...Ch. 10 - You are designing a simple elevator system for an...Ch. 10 - The Atwoods Machine. Figure P10.59 illustrates an...Ch. 10 - The mechanism shown in Fig. P10.60 is used to...Ch. 10 - A large 16.0-kg roll of paper with radius R = 18.0...Ch. 10 - A block with mass m = 5.00 kg slides down a...Ch. 10 - Two metal disks, one with radius R1 = 2.50 cm and...Ch. 10 - A lawn roller in the form of a thin-walled, hollow...Ch. 10 - Two weights are connected by a very light,...Ch. 10 - You complain about fire safety to the landlord of...Ch. 10 - The Yo-yo. A yo-yo is made from two uniform disks,...Ch. 10 - CP A thin-walled, hollow spherical shell of mass m...Ch. 10 - A basketball (which can be closely modeled as a...Ch. 10 - CP A solid uniform ball rolls without slipping up...Ch. 10 - Rolling Stones. A solid, uniform, spherical...Ch. 10 - You are designing a system for moving aluminum...Ch. 10 - A 42.0-cm-diameter wheel, consisting of a rim and...Ch. 10 - A uniform, 0.0300-kg rod of length 0.400 in...Ch. 10 - A uniform solid cylinder with mass M and radius 2R...Ch. 10 - Tarzan and Jane in the 21st Century. Tarzan has...Ch. 10 - A 5.00-kg ball is dropped from a height of 12.0 m...Ch. 10 - The solid wood door of a gymnasium is 1.00 m wide...Ch. 10 - A uniform rod of length L rests on a friction less...Ch. 10 - CP A large turntable with radius 6.00 m rotates...Ch. 10 - In your job as a mechanical engineer you are...Ch. 10 - A local ice hockey team has asked you to design an...Ch. 10 - You are designing a slide for a water park. In a...Ch. 10 - Neutron Star Glitches. Occasionally, a rotating...Ch. 10 - A 500.0-g bird is flying horizontally at 2.25 m/s,...Ch. 10 - CP A small block with mass 0.130 kg is attached to...Ch. 10 - A 55-kg runner runs around the edge of a...Ch. 10 - DATA The V6 engine in a 2014 Chevrolet Silverado...Ch. 10 - DATA You have one object of each of these shapes,...Ch. 10 - DATA You are testing a small flywheel (radius...Ch. 10 - CALC A block with mass m is revolving with linear...Ch. 10 - When an object is rolling without slipping, the...Ch. 10 - A demonstration gyroscope wheel is constructed by...Ch. 10 - The moment of inertia of the empty turntable is...Ch. 10 - While the turntable is being accelerated, the...Ch. 10 - A doubling of the torque produces a greater...Ch. 10 - If the bodys center of mass were not placed on the...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
3. What is free-fall, and why does it make you weightless? Briefly describe why astronauts are weightless in th...
The Cosmic Perspective
The north pole of a mag’iet is moved toward a copper loop, as shown below. If you are looking at the loop from ...
University Physics Volume 2
The pV-diagram of the Carnot cycle.
Sears And Zemansky's University Physics With Modern Physics
The combined mass of the dog and basket.
Physics (5th Edition)
Calculate the average volume per molecule for an ideal gas at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. Then t...
An Introduction to Thermal Physics
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- The puck in Figure P11.46 has a mass of 0.120 kg. The distance of the puck from the center of rotation is originally 40.0 cm, and the puck is sliding with a speed of 80.0 cm/s. The string is pulled downward 15.0 cm through the hole in the frictionless table. Determine the work done on the puck. (Suggestion: Consider the change of kinetic energy.) Figure P11.46arrow_forwardA turntable (disk) of radius r = 26.0 cm and rotational inertia0.400 kg m2 rotates with an angular speed of 3.00 rad/s arounda frictionless, vertical axle. A wad of clay of mass m =0.250 kg drops onto and sticks to the edge of the turntable.What is the new angular speed of the turntable?arrow_forwardA disk with moment of inertia I1 rotates about a frictionless, vertical axle with angular speed i. A second disk, this one having moment of inertia I2 and initially not rotating, drops onto the first disk (Fig. P10.50). Because of friction between the surfaces, the two eventually reach the same angular speed f. (a) Calculate f. (b) Calculate the ratio of the final to the initial rotational energy. Figure P10.50arrow_forward
- A buzzard (m = 9.29 kg) is flying in circular motion with aspeed of 8.44 m/s while viewing its meal below. If the radius ofthe buzzards circular motion is 8.00 m, what is the angularmomentum of the buzzardaround the center of its motion?arrow_forwardA horizontal disk with moment of inertia I1 rotates with angular speed 1 about a vertical frictionless axle. A second horizontal disk having moment of inertia I2 drops onto the first, initially not rotating but sharing the same axis as the first disk. Because their surfaces are rough, the two disks eventually reach the same angular speed . The ratio /l is equal to (a) I1/I2 (b) I2/I1 (c) I1/( I1 + I2) (d) I2/( I1 + I2)arrow_forwardTo develop muscle tone, a woman lifts a 2.00-kg weight held in her hand. She uses her biceps muscle to flex the lower arm through an angle of 60.0°. (a) What is the angular acceleration if the weight is 24.0 cm from the elbow joint, her forearm has a moment of inertia of 0.250kg-m2 and the net force she exerts is 750 N at an effective perpendicular lever arm of 2.00 cm? (b) How much work does she do?arrow_forward
- Rigid rods of negligible mass lying along the y axis connect three particles (Fig. P10.18). The system rotates about the x axis with an angular speed of 2.00 rad/s. Find (a) the moment of inertia about the x axis, (b) the total rotational kinetic energy evaluated from 12I2, (c) the tangential speed of each particle, and (d) the total kinetic energy evaluated from 12mivi2. (e) Compare the answers for kinetic energy in parts (b) and (d). Figure P10.18arrow_forwardThe puck in Figure 10.25 has a mass of 0.120 kg. The distance of the puck from the center of rotation is originally 40.0 cm, and the puck is sliding with a speed of 80.0 cm/s. The string is pulled downward 15.0 cm through the hole in the frictionless table. Determine the work done on the puck. (Suggestion: Consider the change of kinetic energy.)arrow_forwardA tennis ball is a hollow sphere with a thin wall. It is set rolling without slipping at 4.03 m/s on a horizontal section of a track as shown in Figure P10.62. It rolls around the inside of a vertical circular loop of radius r = 45.0 cm. As the ball nears the bottom of the loop, the shape of the track deviates from a perfect circle so that the ball leaves the track at a point h = 20.0 cm below the horizontal section. (a) Find the balls speed at the top of the loop. (b) Demonstrate that the ball will not fall from the track at the top of the loop. (c) Find the balls speed as it leaves the track at the bottom. What If? (d) Suppose that static friction between ball and track were negligible so that the ball slid instead of rolling. Would its speed then be higher, lower, or the same at the top of the loop? (e) Explain your answer to part (d). Figure P10.62arrow_forward
- A 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_forwardA thin rod of length 2.65 m and mass 13.7 kg is rotated at anangular speed of 3.89 rad/s around an axis perpendicular to therod and through one of its ends. Find the magnitude of the rodsangular momentum.arrow_forwardA solid, uniform disk of radius 0.250 m and mass 55.0 kg rolls down a ramp of length 4.50 m that makes an angle of 15.0 with the horizontal. The disk starts from rest from the top of the ramp. Find (a) the speed of the disks center of mass when it reaches the bottom of the ramp and (b) the angular speed of the disk at the bottom of the ramp.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
- University Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningGlencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill
Moment of Inertia; Author: Physics with Professor Matt Anderson;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrGhUTeIlWs;License: Standard Youtube License