Tangential Acceleration Formula
Tangential Acceleration Formula
α=
α = 108 radians/s2
The angular acceleration of the top is 108 radians/s 2.
In physics, tangential acceleration is a measure of how the tangential velocity of
a point at a certain radius changes with time. Tangential acceleration is just like
linear acceleration, but it’s specific to the tangential direction, which is relevant to
circular motion. You start with the magnitude of the angular acceleration,
which tells you how the speed of the object in the tangential direction is
changing.
For example, when you start a lawn mower, a point on the tip of one of its blades
starts at a tangential velocity of zero and ends up with a tangential velocity with a
pretty large magnitude. So how do you determine the point’s tangential
acceleration? You can start with the following equation, which relates velocity to
acceleration
so you can plug in this information in the previous equation to relate the
tangential acceleration to the change in angular velocity:
However,