Rotation Angle
Introducing Rotation Angle and Angular Velocity
In Kinematics, we studied motion along a straight line and introduced such concepts as displacement, velocity, and acceleration. Two-Dimensional Kinematics dealt with motion in two dimensions. Projectile motion is a special case of two-dimensional kinematics in which the object is projected into the air, while being subject to the gravitational force, and lands a distance away. In this tutorial, we consider situations where the object does not land but moves in a curve. We begin the study of uniform circular motion by defining two angular quantities needed to describe rotational motion.
Rotation Angle
When objects rotate about some axis—for example, when the CD (compact disc) in the figure below rotates about its center—each point in the object follows a circular arc. Consider a line from the center of the CD to its edge. Each pit used to record sound along this line moves through the same angle in the same amount of time. The rotation angle is the amount of rotation and is analogous to linear distance. We define the rotation angle \(\text{Δ}\theta \) to be the ratio of the arc length to the radius of curvature:
All points on a CD travel in circular arcs. The pits along a line from the center to the edge all move through the same angle \(\text{Δ}\theta \) in a time \(\text{Δ}t\).
The radius of a circle is rotated through an angle \(\text{Δ}\theta \). The arc length \(\text{Δs}\) is described on the circumference.
The arc length\(\phantom{\rule{0.25em}{0ex}}\text{Δ}s\) is the distance traveled along a circular path as shown in the figure above Note that \(r\) is the radius of curvature of the circular path.
We know that for one complete revolution, the arc length is the circumference of a circle of radius \(r\). The circumference of a circle is \(2\pi r\). Thus for one complete revolution the rotation angle is
This result is the basis for defining the units used to measure rotation angles, \(\text{Δ}\theta \) to be radians (rad), defined so that
A comparison of some useful angles expressed in both degrees and radians is shown in the table below.
Comparison of Angular Units
| Degree Measures | Radian Measure |
|---|---|
| \(\text{30º}\) | \(\cfrac{\pi }{6}\) |
| \(\text{60º}\) | \(\cfrac{\pi }{3}\) |
| \(\text{90º}\) | \(\cfrac{\pi }{2}\) |
| \(\text{120º}\) | \(\cfrac{2\pi }{3}\) |
| \(\text{135º}\) | \(\cfrac{3\pi }{4}\) |
| \(\text{180º}\) | \(\pi \) |
Points 1 and 2 rotate through the same angle (\(\text{Δ}\theta \)), but point 2 moves through a greater arc length \(\left(\text{Δ}s\right)\) because it is at a greater distance from the center of rotation \(\left(r\right)\).
If \(\text{Δ}\theta =2\pi \) rad, then the CD has made one complete revolution, and every point on the CD is back at its original position. Because there are \(\text{360º}\) in a circle or one revolution, the relationship between radians and degrees is thus
so that
This lesson is part of:
Uniform Circular Motion and Gravitation