<span>Answer:
The moments of inertia are listed on p. 223, and a uniform cylinder through its center is:
I = 1/2mr2
so
I = 1/2(4.80 kg)(.0710 m)2 = 0.0120984 kgm2
Since there is a frictional torque of 1.20 Nm, we can use the angular equivalent of F = ma to find the angular deceleration:
t = Ia
-1.20 Nm = (0.0120984 kgm2)a
a = -99.19 rad/s/s
Now we have a kinematics question to solve:
wo = (10,000 Revolutions/Minute)(2p radians/revolution)(1 minute/60 sec) = 1047.2 rad/s
w = 0
a = -99.19 rad/s/s
Let's find the time first:
w = wo + at : wo = 1047.2 rad/s; w = 0 rad/s; a = -99.19 rad/s/s
t = 10.558 s = 10.6 s
And the displacement (Angular)
Now the formula I want to use is only in the formula packet in its linear form, but it works just as well in angular form
s = (u+v)t/2
Which is
q = (wo+w)t/2 : wo = 1047.2 rad/s; w = 0 rad/s; t = 10.558 s
q = (125.7 rad/s+418.9 rad/s)(3.5 s)/2 = 952.9 radians
But the problem wanted revolutions, so let's change the units:
q = (5528.075087 radians)(revolution/2p radians) = 880. revolutions</span>
On an extremely warm day, the balloon might pop because gases expand the hotter they get, and due to its temperature it is likely to pop if it is, indeed, nearly, if not completely, filled to its capacity. I hope this helps, have a nice day!
It is C because less than one percent of water is fresh water
If this case could ever happen, the speed would follow from this formula:
with f the frequency and lambda the wavelength. We are give a wavelength of 10m. The frequencies of the visible light can range between 400 to about 790 Terahertz, so let us pick a middle point of 600 THz ("green-ish") as a "representative."
The speed of such a wave would have to be 6e+15 m/s (which would be 7 orders of magnitude higher than the universal speed of light constant)