Consider a chain around two gears, one of of radius $r_1$ and the other of $r_2$. Say the gear $r_1$ is attached to a rotational device that delivers torque $\tau$ . After a quarter cycle of rotation you have input energy $E = \tau\cdot\pi/4$ rotational energy into the system.
Say you have the same system but this time gear $r_2$ is replaced with another gear of radius $r_3$ where $r_3>r_2$. Again you spin it with torque $ \tau$ for a quarter cycle so you have the same energy in the system.
My questions are:
Would system 2 (with gear $r_3$) be spinning faster than system 1 (with gear $r_2$)? I think it would since there is a larger gear.
If it is spinning faster, how is that justifiable? You input the same energy into both the systems but one is spinning faster than the other.
Thanks for any help.
Edit for clarification:
- I'm asking about the angular velocity of the first gear in both systems
- The rotational device is concentrically connected to the first gear