- #1
flower76
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I'm trying to solve this problem, but keep going around and not getting the correct equation.
A wheel of radius R, mass M, and moment of inertia I is mounted on a frictionless horizontal axle. A light cord wrapped around the wheel supports a body of mass m. At time t=0, the body is let go and the wheel starts rotating.
Show that the angular acceleration of the wheel is:
[tex]\alpha\equiv\frac{g}{R+I/mR}[/tex]
I know that [tex]I\alpha=TR[/tex] where T is the tension in the chord
and [tex]T=mg-ma[/tex], and [tex]a=R\alpha[/tex]
But in trying to combine the equations something is not working out, I think I am missing something, but I can't figure out what. Please help.
A wheel of radius R, mass M, and moment of inertia I is mounted on a frictionless horizontal axle. A light cord wrapped around the wheel supports a body of mass m. At time t=0, the body is let go and the wheel starts rotating.
Show that the angular acceleration of the wheel is:
[tex]\alpha\equiv\frac{g}{R+I/mR}[/tex]
I know that [tex]I\alpha=TR[/tex] where T is the tension in the chord
and [tex]T=mg-ma[/tex], and [tex]a=R\alpha[/tex]
But in trying to combine the equations something is not working out, I think I am missing something, but I can't figure out what. Please help.