Suppose a revolving door at the bank is spinning around once every 5 seconds. As you walk through, you push on the door for 2 seconds, which increases that rotational speed so that it rotates once a second. What was the Rotational acceleration due to your push?

To calculate the rotational acceleration, we need to use the equation:

Rotational acceleration (α) = Δω / Δt

Where:
- Δω represents the change in angular velocity (rotational speed)
- Δt represents the time interval over which the change occurs.

In this case, the initial rotational speed of the revolving door is one revolution every 5 seconds, or ω₁ = 1 revolution/5 seconds. After you push on the door for 2 seconds, the rotational speed increases to one revolution per second, or ω₂ = 1 revolution/1 second.

To find the change in angular velocity, we subtract the initial angular velocity from the final angular velocity:

Δω = ω₂ - ω₁

Substituting the values:

Δω = (1 revolution/1 second) - (1 revolution/5 seconds)
Δω = (5 revolutions/5 seconds) - (1 revolution/5 seconds)
Δω = (4 revolutions/5 seconds)

Next, we need to calculate the change in time:

Δt = 2 seconds

Now, we can substitute these values into the equation for rotational acceleration:

Rotational acceleration (α) = Δω / Δt
α = (4 revolutions/5 seconds) / (2 seconds)

Simplifying, we have:

α = 2 revolutions/5 seconds²

Therefore, the rotational acceleration due to your push on the revolving door is 2 revolutions per 5 seconds squared.