Physics : Rotational Motion and Angular Acceleration

A bicycle is turned upside down while its owner repairs a flat tire. A friend spins the other wheel and observes that drops of water fly off tangentially. She measures the heights reached by drops moving vertically (see figure below). A drop that breaks loose from the tire on one turn rises vertically 58.0 cm above the tangent point. A drop that breaks loose on the next turn rises 44.0 cm above the tangent point. The radius of the wheel is 0.390 m.

 (a) Why does the first drop rise higher than the second drop?

 (b) Neglecting air friction and using only the observed heights and the radius of the wheel, find the wheel’s angular acceleration (assuming it to be constant). (Indicate the direction with the sign of your answer. Take the clockwise direction to be positive.) 

"Get 15% discount on your first 3 orders with us"
Use the following coupon
FIRST15

Order Now