Transcript Part V
Section 10.6: Torque
Translation-Rotation Analogues & Connections
Translation
Rotation
Displacement
x
θ
Velocity
v
ω
Acceleration
a
α
Mass (moment of inertia) m
I
Kinetic Energy (K) (½)mv2
(½)Iω2
Force
F
?
CONNECTIONS
s = rθ, v = rω, at= rα, ac = (v2/r) = ω2r
• Newton’s 1st Law (rotational language version): “A
rotating body will continue to rotate at a
constant angular velocity unless an external
TORQUE acts.”
• Clearly, to understand this, we need to
define the concept of TORQUE.
• Newton’s 2nd Law (rotational language version):
Also needs torque.
• To cause an object to rotate requires a FORCE,
F. (Cause of angular acceleration α).
• BUT: The location of the force on the object &
the direction it acts are also important!
Introduce the torque concept.
From experiment!
• Angular acceleration α F.
• But also α (distance from the point of application
of F to the hinge = Moment Arm or Lever Arm, d)
• Moment Arm d = distance of the axis of
rotation from the “line of action” of force F
• d = Distance which is to both the axis of rotation
and to an imaginary line drawn along the direction of
the force (“Line of Action”).
• Line of Action Imaginary line extending out both ends of
the force vector. Experiment finds that angular acceleration
α (force) (moment arm) = Fd
Define: TORQUE
Lower case
Greek “tau”
τ Fd
τ causes α
(Just as in the linear motion case, F causes a)
Newton’s laws & rotational motion
We want to find a rotational analogue to force
The figure is a top view of a
door that is hinged on the left:
The 4 pushing forces are of
equal strength. Which of these
will be the most effective at
opening the door?
F1 will open the door.
F2 will not.
F3 will open the door, but not as easily as F1.
F4 will open the door – it has same magnitude as F1, but
we know it is not as effective as pushing at the outer
edge of the door.
Ability of force F to cause a rotation or twisting
motion depends on 3 factors:
1. The magnitude F of the force.
2. The distance r from point of
application to pivot.
3. The angle at which F is applied.
Make these idea quantitative.
Figure is a force F applied at
one point on a rigid body.
We define a new quantity called
torque, denoted by the symbol :
rF sin
where is the angle from r to F .
τ depends on the 3 properties, & is the
rotational analogy to force.
Let’s see this again
rF sin
Torque Units:
Newton-meter = N m
Sign convention: A torque that tends to rotate an object in a counterclockwise
direction is positive. torque that tends to rotate an object in clockwise direction
is positive. See Figure.
Section 10.7: Rigid Object Under a Net Torque
Consider the object shown.
• The force F1 will tend to cause
a counterclockwise rotation about O.
• The force F2 will tend to cause
a clockwise rotation about O
• The net torque is:
τnet = ∑τ = τ1+ τ2
= F1d1 – F2d2
We’ve seen that toque is the rotational analogue to force.
Now we need to learn what toque does.
Figure is a model rocket engine attached to one end of lightweight, rigid rod.
Tangential acceleration at & the
angular acceleration α are related.
at r
Ft mat mr
Tangential component of force.
Multiply both sides by r:
rFt mr 2
mr
rFt
2
Therefore, torque τ causes angular acceleration α. This
relation is analogous to Newton’s 2nd Law F = ma
Newton’s 2nd Law for Rotations
Figure: A rigid body undergoes pure
rotational motion about a fixed, frictionless,
& unmoving axis. Net torque on the object is
the sum of the torques on all the individual
particles.
net
2
i mi ri mi ri
i
i
i
2
Definition: Moment of Inertia
I m1r12 m2 r2 2 m3r32
mi ri 2
i
net
I
or net I
Newton’s 2nd law for rotational motion
Ex. 10.7: Net Torque on a Cylinder
Double cylinder, shaped as shown.
Attached to axle through center.
Large part, radius R1 has rope around
it & is pulled, with tension T1 to right.
Small part, radius R2 has a rope
around it & is pulled down with
tension T2.
(A) Net torque?
∑τ = τ1+ τ2 = T2R2 – T1R1
(B) T1 = 5 N, to R1 = 1 m, T2 = 15 N, R2 = 0.5 m.
Net torque? Which direction will it rotate?
∑τ = (15)(0.5) – (1)(5) = 2.5 N m
Direction is counterclockwise (positive torque)
Ex. 10.8: Rotating Rod
Ex. 10.10: Angular Acceleration of a Wheel
Wheel, radius R, mass M, moment of inertia I. A cord is
wrapped around it & attached to mass m. System is
released & m falls & wheel rotates. Find the tension T in
the cord, acceleration a of falling m, angular acceleration
α of wheel.
Newton’s 2nd Law for wheel:
∑τ = Iα (1)
Tension T is tangential force on wheel & is the only force
producing a torque. So:
∑τ = TR (2)
m moves in a straight line
Newton’s 2nd Law for m: SFy = ma = mg – T (3)
No slipping of cord.
a = αR
(4)
From (1) & (2):
α = (∑τ/I) = (TR)/I (5)
From (4) & (5):
a = (mg – T)/m = (TR2)/I
(6)
Solve for T from (6):
T = (mg)/[1 + (mR2/I)]
Put into (6) to get a:
a = g/[1 + (I/mR2)]
Put into (4) to get α:
α = g/[R + (I/mR)]
a