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In a classic carnival ride, patrons stand against the wall in a cylindrically shaped room. Once the room gets spinning fast enough, the floor drops from the bottom of the room! Friction between the walls of the room and the people on the ride make them the “stick” to the wall so they do not slide down. In one ride, the radius of the cylindrical room is R = 6.4 m and the room spins with a frequency of 21.8 revolutions per minute.
1) What is the speed of a person “stuck” to the wall?
m/s
2) What is the normal force of the wall on a rider of m = 54 kg?
N
3) What is the minimum coefficient of friction needed between the wall and the person?
4) If a new person with mass 108 kg rides the ride, what minimum coefficient of friction between the wall and the person would be needed?
5) Which of the following changes would decrease the coefficient of friction needed for this ride?
a, increasing the rider’s mass
b, increasing the radius of the ride
c, increasing the speed of the ride
d, increasing the acceleration due to gravity (taking the ride to another planet)
6) To be safe, the engineers making the ride want to be sure the normal force does not exceed 2. 1 times each persons weight – and therefore adj the frequency of revolution accordingly. What is the minimum coefficient of friction now needed?
♦ Relevant knowledge
When there is a vertical circular movement of the carnival ride, passengers remain attached to the outer area of the cylinder with the assistance by frictional forces. Horizontal force i.e the normal force of the cylinder keeps its circular movement of passengers while the direction in which the centripetal force that the occupants experience is toward the center of the rotation. Maximum speed for the cylinder’s rotation is dependent on the radius of rotation as well as the static friction coefficient.
1 Answer