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28 February, 19:35

A wheel with rotational inertia 0.04 kg•m2 and radius 0.02 m is turning at the rate of 10 revolutions per second when a frictional torque is applied to stop it. How much work is done by the torque in stopping the wheel?

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  1. 28 February, 22:52
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    -78.96 J

    Explanation:

    The workdone by the torque in stopping the wheel = rotational kinetic energy change of wheel.

    So W = 1/2I (ω₁² - ω₀²) where I = rotational inertia of wheel = 0.04 kgm², r = radius of wheel = 0.02 m, ω₀ = initial rotational speed = 10 rev/s * 2π = 62.83 rad/s, ω₁ = final rotational speed = 0 rad/s (since the wheel stops)

    W = 1/2I (ω₁² - ω₀²) = 1/2 0.04 kgm² (0² - (62.83 rad/s) ²) = - 78.96 J
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