printz0r
Oct 24, 2009, 05:01 PM
I am doing a advanced physics problem where I have an equilateral triangle with all of its corners connected to a wheel. The triangle is sitting up right on 2 wheels. It has sides of .2m The wheel to the right is being lifted at a constant rate of .3 m/s. Which causes the wheel on the left to move in the x direction only. The question asks to solve for the angular velocity of the triangle.
The book starts the problem saying that x^2 +y^2 = b^2. They differentiate which leads to x(dx/dt) + y(dy/dt) = 0. How does that differential work, + how do you solve the rest of the problem?
The book starts the problem saying that x^2 +y^2 = b^2. They differentiate which leads to x(dx/dt) + y(dy/dt) = 0. How does that differential work, + how do you solve the rest of the problem?