It's a bit complicated to list here so please follow the related link below.
angular momentum and angular velocity
linear velocity= radius* angular velocity
No, uniform angular velocity means no angular acceleration.
Angular velocity is a vector with a direction and angular speed is a scalar with no direction.
no, velocity=displacement/time
There are several, what is it that you want to calculate? The "natural" units for angular velocity are radians/second. The relationship between linear velocity and angular velocity is especially simple in this case: linear velocity (at the edge) = angular velocity x radius.
Assuming that "r" is the radius, that simply isn't sufficient information to calculate angular velocity.
Measure the rpm & calculate the torque as power divided by angular velocity
angular momentum and angular velocity
linear velocity= radius* angular velocity
No, uniform angular velocity means no angular acceleration.
Angular velocity is a vector with a direction and angular speed is a scalar with no direction.
no, velocity=displacement/time
Orbital Velocity is calculated in m/s where as angular velocity is calculated in rad/s.. Answer is very clear.. angular velocity is calculated when body is rotating around a axis and a reference point is needed to calculate it.. where as orbital velocity is calculated when body is moving around a bado in circular path, nt around itself... e.g. Earth rotates around so it have angular velocity .. it also rotates around sun in orbit so it has Orbital velocity also :)
Yes, angular velocity is a vector quantity
velosity in circular path angular
Assuming that angles are measured in radians, and angular velocity in radians per second (this simplifies formulae): Radius of rotation is unrelated to angular velocity. Linear velocity = angular velocity x radius Centripetal acceleration = velocity squared / radius Centripetal acceleration = (angular velocity) squared x radius Centripetal force = mass x acceleration = mass x (angular velocity) squared x radius