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Yun Yea-Ji (KOR) at the 2009 South Korean Figure Skating Championships
Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Consider an ice skater performing a spin. The ice is very nearly a frictionless surface

A skater spinning around has constant angular momentum, but can change his or her Moment of Interia by changing body position. What happens to their rate of rotation when they do so?

    Part A

    Assume that the skater originally is standing straight up while spinning, with arms extended. He or she then draws his or her arms inwards tightly to the sides. How does the angular velocity change?

    Solution

    System:

    Interactions:

    Model:

    Approach:

    Interactions:

    Model:

    Approach:

    An Important Assumption

    The minimum coefficient of friction will occur when both friction forces are maxima. Thus, we have the important relationships:

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    |F_

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    [ |F_

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    |F_

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    | ]\end

    Diagrammatic Representation

    Because we know the floor's static friction coefficient, we can streamline the solution by switching our choice of axis.

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    Mathematical Representation

    The resulting equations are:

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      [ \sum F_

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      = - mg + F_

      + \mu_
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      F_

    = 0 ]
    [ \sum \tau = - mg (L/2) \cos\theta + F_

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    L\cos\theta - \mu_

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    F_

    L \sin\theta ]\end

    Note that the y-component of the floor force is the normal force from the floor on the ladder, and the x-component of the wall force is the normal force from the wall on the ladder. Since we are assuming static friction is maximized, we have rewritten Ff,x and Fw,y as the coefficient of friction times the relevant normal force.

    The only equation that can be solved immediately is torque balance, which gives:

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    {2\left(1-\mu_

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    \tan\theta\right)} = \mbox

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    ]\end

    We can then substitute this result into the equation of x-force balance to find:

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    ]\end

    Finally, we can find the required coefficient of static friction to be:

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    = \frac{mg-F_{f,y}}{F_{w,x}} = 1.19 ] \end

    We found in Part A that the ladder is stable as long as the coefficient of friction with the ground is 0.19 or greater, even if there is no friction at all from the wall. Does it make sense that in Part B the wall's friction coefficient has to be so much larger than 0.19 if the wall is only partly responsible for keeping the ladder from sliding?

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