Follow

LecDem Blog

Demo Highlight: Rolling vs. Sliding

This week we’re taking a look at a deceptively simple demonstration, D1-61: Rolling versus Sliding. An aluminum cylinder rolls down an inclined plane. An identical aluminum cylinder has tiny bearings on one end, so that when stood upright on that end it effectively slides almost without friction down the incline. You might invite your students to make a prediction: If the two cylinders are started from the top at the same time, will the rolling cylinder or the sliding cylinder reach the bottom of the incline first?

one aluminum cylinder lying on its roudned side, an identical one stands on its flat end with tiny bearings

The two cylinders start at the same height with the same potential energy. As they slide or roll down the ramp, that potential energy is converted into kinetic energy. Linear kinetic energy is proportional to the mass of the cylinder and the square of its velocity. However, the rolling one also has rotational kinetic energy, which is proportional to the moment of inertia of the cylinder and the square of its angular velocity. So for the rolling cylinder, some of the potential energy is converted into rotational kinetic energy as it rolls, and only some of the potential energy is converted into linear potential energy, giving it a lower velocity as it goes down the ramp.

So the sliding cylinder reaches the bottom first!

It can be helpful to illustrate this exchange of energies with graphs. Andrew Duffy at Boston University has created simulations with animated energy graphs, one here for a mass sliding down a ramp, and another here for a mass rolling down a ramp. Try them out for yourself! You can see that the potential and kinetic components always sum to the same total energy, showing that energy is conserved.

 

More Articles ...

  1. STEM News Tip: Space, Sun, Stones, and Streaming
  2. Demo Highlight: Suspended Slinky
  3. STEM News Tip: Geminids Meteors
  4. STEM News Tip: Physics Today Features Music & Acoustics for International Year of Sound
  5. STEM News Tip: National Math Festival Online
  6. Demo Highlight: Pendulum Length Ratio
  7. STEM News Tip: Arecibo Observatory to be Decomissioned
  8. Demonstration Highlight: Potential Well
  9. STEM News Tip: UMD Data Challenge 2021
  10. STEM News Tip: Space Launch System Tests Resume
  11. STEM News Tip: The Mathematics of a Pandemic
  12. STEM News Tip: Try NASA’s Eyes on for size!
  13. STEM News Tip: AIP Foundation & TEAM-UP Report
  14. Demo Highlight: Free Fall in Vacuum
  15. STEM News Tip: New Comet in the Neighborhood
  16. Demo Highlight: Van de Graaff and Pie Pans
  17. STEM News Tip: Upcoming Virtual Events with UMD Science
  18. Demo Highlight: The Shive Wave Machine with Prof. Peter Shawhan
  19. The Physics of Bats
  20. Demo Highlight: Electromagnet With Bang
  21. STEM News Tip: Webinar Series
  22. STEM News Tip: Sci-Fi Costumes at Air&Space Museum
  23. STEM News Tip: DOE on STEM Careers
  24. Demonstration Highlight: The Egg Crusher
  25. STEM News Tip: Upcoming SPS Virtual Colloquium with Dr. Nicole Gugliucci
  26. STEM News Tip: Physics Comedy at the Maryland STEM Festival
  27. STEM News Tip: Dean Steve Fetter wins APS Leo Szilard Lectureship Award
  28. Demonstration Highlight: Guitar & Oscilloscope
  29. STEM News Tip: 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics Announced
  30. Demo Highlight: Racing Balls 2
  31. STEM News Tip: Maryland STEM Festival 2020
  32. Demonstration Highlight: Fourier Analysis
  33. STEM News Tip: Learning Resources for Nuclear Power
  34. Today in Physics History: Neptune
  35. Highlight: Van de Graaff Generator Animation
  36. STEM News Tip: Exoplanet around a White Dwarf Star
  37. Animation Highlight: Pendulum Waves
  38. STEM News Tip: Quantum Fireside Chat with Nobel Laureate Bill Phillips
  39. Demo Highlight: Laser and Double Slit
  40. STEM News Tip: Phosphine on Venus
  41. STEM News Tip: COVID-19 and the Physics Job Market
  42. Highlight: Radio Waves and Faraday Cage
  43. Remote Teaching Resources
  44. STEM News Tip: New Gravitational Waves Discoveries!
  45. Atwood's Machine: Testing Newton’s Second Law
  46. STEM News Tip: Some new articles in science teaching & information, August 2020
  47. Demonstration Highlight: Masses Dropped and Shot
  48. STEM News Tip: Native American Physics & Astronomy
  49. STEM News Tip: Titan and its Atmosphere on APOD
  50. STEM News Tip: COVID-19 impact on research
  51. The Tablecloth, the Coin, and Other Adventures with Inertia
  52. Quantum Demonstration and Simulation: The Hydrogen Atom
  53. STEM News Tip: New Atmospheric Phenomena Spotted on Venus
  54. STEM News Tip: SPS Virtual Colloquium
  55. Demonstration Highlight: Simple Harmonic Motion & Uniform Circular Motion
  56. STEM News Tip: Meteor Showers and Rain Showers
  57. STEM News Tip: Sonic Tourism
  58. Demonstration Highlight: Electromagnet
  59. STEM News Tip: Mars 2020 launches this week!
  60. STEM News Tip: Nova Reticuli 2020
  61. How many demonstrations?
  62. STEM News Tip: Solar Observer webcast this week!
  63. STEM News Tip: Children Learning About Gears
  64. Space News: The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope
  65. Demo Highlight: Vector Addition
  66. Demonstration Highlight: The Pencil and Plywood Experiment
  67. Demo Highlight: The Ripple Tank and a Ripple Tank Simulator
  68. Demo Highlight: The Racing Balls in Slow Motion
  69. Happy birthday, Alexander Müller
  70. New Demonstration: The Paramagnetism of a Dysprosium Pendulum
  71. Welcome to Spring 2020
  72. Light Up the Night: Neon and "Neon" Lights
  73. A Heated Discussion In Class
  74. The Physics Soda Can Returns: Electrostatic Induction
  75. Physics Teatime 3: Do Not Try This At Home
  76. Introducing Our Newest Center of Mass Demonstration
  77. FLIGHT!
  78. Happy Birthday Carl Sagan
  79. Hot Air Balloon
  80. Upcoming Events at UMD Physics!
  81. Welcome to Fall 2019!
  82. Summer Hiatus
  83. Phun with Electrons: Particle or Wave?
  84. Physics Teatime 2: On The Making Of Tea
  85. On the Choosing of Demonstrations
  86. Teatime in Physics
  87. Happy Birthday to Émilie du Châtelet
  88. Seeing Sound: Vibrations on a Plate
  89. Women Nobel Laureates in Physics
  90. Coming Soon: Physics is Phun presents Induction and Deduction
  91. New Portable Ripple Tank
  92. Irene Joliot-Curie
  93. New Demos: Buoyancy and Electromagnetic Forces
  94. Falling into Free Fall
  95. Happy 100th Birthday Katherine Johnson!
  96. Demonstration Orders for the Fall Semester
  97. Welcome!