The problem states:
A 50-kg monkey sits at the top of a 5-m high 200-kg pole. A worker saws through the bottom of the pole so that it falls on the side. With what speed does the monkey hit the floor if she holds on to the pole?
Lets write:
$m = \rm 50 \ kg$
$M = \rm 200 \ kg$
$h = \rm 5 \ m$
So at first they have a combined potential energy of : $$W_p = mgh + Mg(h/2)$$ This part is fine with me.
But then, when you look at the moment when the monkey hits the floor, we wrote that this potential energy transforms to rotational energy of the pole $+$ translational energy of the monkey. I don't understand why this is so, why don't we consider the rotational and translational energy of both of them?
So we wrote:
$$W_k = \frac{1}{2} \cdot \frac{1}{3} \cdot M \cdot h^2 \cdot \omega^2 + \frac{1}{2} \cdot m \cdot v^2$$
Any help explaining this would be very welcome.