degree per second squared

Part of the TechTarget Network of Enterprise IT Web Sites

Search our IT-specific encyclopedia for:
 
Browse alphabetically:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #
All Categories Standards & Organizations

degree per second squared

The degree per second squared (symbolized deg/s 2 or deg · s -2 ) is an alternative unit of angular (rotational) acceleration magnitude, which is the rate of change of angular speed or velocity. The angular acceleration vector also has a direction component that can be defined in either of two senses: counterclockwise or clockwise.

The average angular acceleration magnitude can be obtained by evaluating an object's instantaneous angular speed (in degrees per second) at two different points t 1 and t 2 in time, and then dividing the distance by the span of time t 2 - t 1 (in seconds). Suppose the instantaneous angular speed at time t 1 is equal to u 1 , and the instantaneous angular speed at time t 2 is equal to u 2 . Then the average angular acceleration magnitude b avg (in degrees per second squared) during the time interval [ t 1 , t 2 ] is given by:

b avg = ( u 2 - u 1 ) / ( t 2 - t 1 )

Instantaneous angular acceleration magnitude is more difficult to intuit, because it involves an expression of rotational motion over an "infinitely short" interval of time. Let p represent a specific point in time. Suppose an object is in rotational motion at about that time. The average angular acceleration magnitude can be determined over increasingly short time intervals centered at p , for example:

[ p -4, p +4]
[ p -3, p +3]
[ p -2, p +2]
[ p -1, p +1]
[ p -0.5, p +0.5]
[ p -0.25, p +0.25]
.
.
.
[ p - x , p + x ]
.
.
.

where the added and subtracted numbers represent seconds. The instantaneous angular acceleration magnitude, b inst , is the limit of the average angular acceleration magnitude as x approaches zero. This is a theoretical value, because it can be obtained only by inference from instantanous speed values determined at the starting and ending points of progressively shorter time spans.

In the complete sense, angular acceleration is a vector quantity having direction as well as magnitude, and representing the rate of change of angular velocity. Suppose, for example, that a wheel's rate of rotation is increasing at 20 deg/s 2 in the counterclockwise sense; this might be the case for a car or truck moving from right to left (relative to the viewer) with increasing speed. This would produce an angular acceleration vector with a magnitude of 20 deg/s 2 , pointing toward the viewer in line with the wheel's axle. But if rate of rotation were decreasing at 20 deg/s 2 in the counterclockwise sense (the same car or truck slowing down while moving from right to left), the angular acceleration vector would have a magnitude of 20 deg/s 2 in the opposite direction, that is, away from the viewer in line with the wheel's axle.

Also see angular acceleration , angular degree , radian per second squared , SI , and Table of Physical Units .



























Last updated on: Sep 21, 2005

>  Enterprise Software related Research & News
>  White Papers for the Retail Industry

Are you a Know-IT-All?
What technology is solid-state lighting based on?
Answer

word of the day Sign up for the Word of the Day
twitter Follow us on Twitter


WORD OF THE DAY...
above the fold
LEARN MORE ABOUT...
Mobile Web design and testing
wear leveling
write amplification
write endurance
decision management
business process governance
Profile-Driven Storage
Resilient File System (ReFS)
Security, Trust and Assurance Registry (STAR)
Windows Server 8
community cloud
managed storage
facial recognition
Shared serial-attached SCSI (SAS)
open compute project
BIOS password
dynamic BPM (business process management)
social BPM (business process management)
in-circuit emulator (ICE)
above the fold
logic simulator
photometric stereo
dynamic case management (DCM)
raw device mapping (RDM)
WhatIs.com RSS Feeds
About Us   |   Contact Us   |   For Advertisers   |   For Business Partners   |   Reprints   |   RSS   |   Awards
TechTarget provides enterprise IT professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective IT purchase decisions and managing their organizations' IT projects - with its network of technology-specific Web sites, events and magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Reprints




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2008, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts