Rotating wheel initial angular velocity given final and time

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the initial angular velocity of a rotating wheel, given its final angular speed and the time taken for a specific number of revolutions. The wheel completes 37 revolutions in 3.0 seconds, ending with an angular speed of 98 rad/s. The average angular velocity is calculated as 37 revolutions multiplied by 2π, divided by 3 seconds, leading to an intermediate step to find the angular velocity at 1.5 seconds. The proposed method involves finding the difference between the final and average angular velocities to deduce the initial speed, resulting in a value of approximately 56.89 rad/s. Alternative methods using angular kinematics equations are also mentioned, suggesting that while the original approach is simpler, it may require additional steps.
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Homework Statement


A rotation wheel required 3.0 s to complete 37 revolutions. its angular speed at the end of the 3.0 s interval is 98 rad/s. what was the original angular speed of the wheel?


Homework Equations


average omega = change in angle/change in time


The Attempt at a Solution



heres my thought on the answer, i wanted to make sure its right since i don't have the correct answer to compare my thoughts

i find the average angular velocity by 37*2pi over 3
since the acceleration is constant the average angular velocity is at 1.5 s
so then i find the difference between final angular velocity which is at 3 seconds and the velocity at 1.5 seconds which is 20.51 and subtract that from the average angular velocity to get the angular velocity at 0 seconds.

the final answer is 56.89 since the velocity at 1.5 seconds is 77.49

is this thought process correct, it seems to be from my point of view.
 
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That works (though you should check your final answer, it looks like you have a couple digits flipped around.

You can also do this with

\omega_f^2 = \omega_i^2 + 2 \alpha \Delta \theta
and
\alpha = \frac{\omega_f - \omega_i}{\Delta t}

I think your way is probably simpler, but requires breaking the problem into two steps. However, you do avoid having to solve a quadratic equation.
 
right, 56.98 rad/s

Thanks!
 
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