fbpx
Wikipedia

Angular velocity

In physics, angular velocity (symbol ω, sometimes Ω), also known as angular frequency vector,[1] is a pseudovector representation of how the angular position or orientation of an object changes with time, i.e. how quickly an object rotates (spins or revolves) around an axis of rotation and how fast the axis itself changes direction.

Angular velocity
Common symbols
ω
SI unitrad ⋅ s−1
In SI base unitss−1
Extensive?yes
Intensive?yes (for rigid body only)
Conserved?no
Behaviour under
coord transformation
pseudovector
Derivations from
other quantities
ω = dθ / dt
Dimension

The magnitude of the pseudovector, , represents the angular speed (or angular frequency), the rate at which the object rotates (spins or revolves). The pseudovector direction is normal to the instantaneous plane of rotation or angular displacement.

There are two types of angular velocity:

  • Orbital angular velocity refers to how fast a point object revolves about a fixed origin, i.e. the time rate of change of its angular position relative to the origin.[citation needed]
  • Spin angular velocity refers to how fast a rigid body rotates with respect to its center of rotation and is independent of the choice of origin, in contrast to orbital angular velocity.

Angular velocity has dimension of angle per unit time; this is analogous to linear velocity, with angle replacing distance, with time in common. The SI unit of angular velocity is radians per second,[2] although degrees per second (°/s) is also common. The radian is a dimensionless quantity, thus the SI units of angular velocity are dimensionally equivalent to reciprocal seconds, s−1, although rad/s is preferable.[3]

The sense of angular velocity is conventionally specified by the right-hand rule, implying clockwise rotations (as viewed on the plane of rotation); negation (multiplication by −1) leaves the magnitude unchanged but flips the axis in the opposite direction.[4]

For example, a geostationary satellite completes one orbit per day above the equator (360 degrees per 24 hours) has angular velocity magnitude (angular speed) ω = 360°/24 h = 15°/h (or 2π rad/24 h ≈ 0.26 rad/h) and angular velocity direction (a unit vector) parallel to Earth's rotation axis (, in the geocentric coordinate system). If angle is measured in radians, the linear velocity is the radius times the angular velocity, . With orbital radius 42,000 km from the earth's center, the satellite's tangential speed through space is thus v = 42,000 km × 0.26/h ≈ 11,000 km/h. The angular velocity is positive since the satellite travels eastward with the Earth's rotation (counter-clockwise from above the north pole.)

Orbital angular velocity of a point particle

Particle in two dimensions

 
The angular velocity of the particle at P with respect to the origin O is determined by the perpendicular component of the velocity vector v.

In the simplest case of circular motion at radius  , with position given by the angular displacement   from the x-axis, the orbital angular velocity is the rate of change of angle with respect to time:  . If   is measured in radians, the arc-length from the positive x-axis around the circle to the particle is  , and the linear velocity is  , so that  .

In the general case of a particle moving in the plane, the orbital angular velocity is the rate at which the position vector relative to a chosen origin "sweeps out" angle. The diagram shows the position vector   from the origin   to a particle  , with its polar coordinates  . (All variables are functions of time  .) The particle has linear velocity splitting as  , with the radial component   parallel to the radius, and the cross-radial (or tangential) component   perpendicular to the radius. When there is no radial component, the particle moves around the origin in a circle; but when there is no cross-radial component, it moves in a straight line from the origin. Since radial motion leaves the angle unchanged, only the cross-radial component of linear velocity contributes to angular velocity.

The angular velocity ω is the rate of change of angular position with respect to time, which can be computed from the cross-radial velocity as:

 

Here the cross-radial speed   is the signed magnitude of  , positive for counter-clockwise motion, negative for clockwise. Taking polar coordinates for the linear velocity   gives magnitude   (linear speed) and angle   relative to the radius vector; in these terms,  , so that

 

These formulas may be derived doing  , being   a function of the distance to the origin with respect to time, and   a function of the angle between the vector and the x axis. Then  . Which is equal to  . (See Unit vector in cylindrical coordinates). Knowing  , we conclude that the radial component of the velocity is given by  , because   is a radial unit vector; and the perpendicular component is given by   because   is a perpendicular unit vector.

In two dimensions, angular velocity is a number with plus or minus sign indicating orientation, but not pointing in a direction. The sign is conventionally taken to be positive if the radius vector turns counter-clockwise, and negative if clockwise. Angular velocity then may be termed a pseudoscalar, a numerical quantity which changes sign under a parity inversion, such as inverting one axis or switching the two axes.

Particle in three dimensions

 
The orbital angular velocity vector encodes the time rate of change of angular position, as well as the instantaneous plane of angular displacement. In this case (counter-clockwise circular motion) the vector points up.

In three-dimensional space, we again have the position vector r of a moving particle. Here, orbital angular velocity is a pseudovector whose magnitude is the rate at which r sweeps out angle, and whose direction is perpendicular to the instantaneous plane in which r sweeps out angle (i.e. the plane spanned by r and v). However, as there are two directions perpendicular to any plane, an additional condition is necessary to uniquely specify the direction of the angular velocity; conventionally, the right-hand rule is used.

Let the pseudovector   be the unit vector perpendicular to the plane spanned by r and v, so that the right-hand rule is satisfied (i.e. the instantaneous direction of angular displacement is counter-clockwise looking from the top of  ). Taking polar coordinates   in this plane, as in the two-dimensional case above, one may define the orbital angular velocity vector as:

 

where θ is the angle between r and v. In terms of the cross product, this is:

 [5]

From the above equation, one can recover the tangential velocity as:

 

Spin angular velocity of a rigid body or reference frame

Given a rotating frame of three unit coordinate vectors, all the three must have the same angular speed at each instant. In such a frame, each vector may be considered as a moving particle with constant scalar radius.

The rotating frame appears in the context of rigid bodies, and special tools have been developed for it: the spin angular velocity may be described as a vector or equivalently as a tensor.

Consistent with the general definition, the spin angular velocity of a frame is defined as the orbital angular velocity of any of the three vectors (same for all) with respect to its own center of rotation. The addition of angular velocity vectors for frames is also defined by the usual vector addition (composition of linear movements), and can be useful to decompose the rotation as in a gimbal. All components of the vector can be calculated as derivatives of the parameters defining the moving frames (Euler angles or rotation matrices). As in the general case, addition is commutative:  .

By Euler's rotation theorem, any rotating frame possesses an instantaneous axis of rotation, which is the direction of the angular velocity vector, and the magnitude of the angular velocity is consistent with the two-dimensional case.

If we choose a reference point   fixed in the rigid body, the velocity   of any point in the body is given by

 

Components from the basis vectors of a body-fixed frame

Consider a rigid body rotating about a fixed point O. Construct a reference frame in the body consisting of an orthonormal set of vectors   fixed to the body and with their common origin at O. The spin angular velocity vector of both frame and body about O is then

 

where   is the time rate of change of the frame vector   due to the rotation.

This formula is incompatible with the expression for orbital angular velocity

 

as that formula defines angular velocity for a single point about O, while the formula in this section applies to a frame or rigid body. In the case of a rigid body a single   has to account for the motion of all particles in the body.

Components from Euler angles

 
Diagram showing Euler frame in green

The components of the spin angular velocity pseudovector were first calculated by Leonhard Euler using his Euler angles and the use of an intermediate frame:

  • One axis of the reference frame (the precession axis)
  • The line of nodes of the moving frame with respect to the reference frame (nutation axis)
  • One axis of the moving frame (the intrinsic rotation axis)

Euler proved that the projections of the angular velocity pseudovector on each of these three axes is the derivative of its associated angle (which is equivalent to decomposing the instantaneous rotation into three instantaneous Euler rotations). Therefore:[6]

 

This basis is not orthonormal and it is difficult to use, but now the velocity vector can be changed to the fixed frame or to the moving frame with just a change of bases. For example, changing to the mobile frame:

 

where   are unit vectors for the frame fixed in the moving body. This example has been made using the Z-X-Z convention for Euler angles.[citation needed]

Tensor

The angular velocity vector   defined above may be equivalently expressed as an angular velocity tensor, the matrix (or linear mapping) W = W(t) defined by:

 

This is an infinitesimal rotation matrix. The linear mapping W acts as  :

 

Calculation of angular velocity tensor of a rotating frame

A vector   undergoing uniform circular motion around a fixed axis satisfies:

 

Let   be the orientation matrix of a frame, whose columns  ,  , and   are the moving orthonormal coordinate vectors of the frame. We can obtain the angular velocity tensor W(t) of A(t) as follows:

The angular velocity   must be the same for each of the column vectors  , so we have:

 

which holds even if A(t) does not rotate uniformly. Therefore the angular velocity tensor is:

 

since the inverse of an orthogonal matrix   is its transpose  .

Properties

In general, the angular velocity in an n-dimensional space is the time derivative of the angular displacement tensor, which is a second rank skew-symmetric tensor.

This tensor W will have n(n−1)/2 independent components, which is the dimension of the Lie algebra of the Lie group of rotations of an n-dimensional inner product space.[7]

Duality with respect to the velocity vector

In three dimensions, angular velocity can be represented by a pseudovector because second rank tensors are dual to pseudovectors in three dimensions. Since the angular velocity tensor W = W(t) is a skew-symmetric matrix:

 

its Hodge dual is a vector, which is precisely the previous angular velocity vector  .

Exponential of W

If we know an initial frame A(0) and we are given a constant angular velocity tensor W, we can obtain A(t) for any given t. Recall the matrix differential equation:

 

This equation can be integrated to give:

 

which shows a connection with the Lie group of rotations.

W is skew-symmetric

We prove that angular velocity tensor is skew symmetric, i.e.   satisfies  .

A rotation matrix A is orthogonal, inverse to its transpose, so we have  . For   a frame matrix, taking the time derivative of the equation gives:

 

Applying the formula  ,

 

Thus, W is the negative of its transpose, which implies it is skew symmetric.

Coordinate-free description

At any instant  , the angular velocity tensor represents a linear map between the position vector   and the velocity vectors   of a point on a rigid body rotating around the origin:

 

The relation between this linear map and the angular velocity pseudovector   is the following.

Because W is the derivative of an orthogonal transformation, the bilinear form

 

is skew-symmetric. Thus we can apply the fact of exterior algebra that there is a unique linear form   on   that

 

where   is the exterior product of   and  .

Taking the sharp L of L we get

 

Introducing  , as the Hodge dual of L, and applying the definition of the Hodge dual twice supposing that the preferred unit 3-vector is  

 

where

 

by definition.

Because   is an arbitrary vector, from nondegeneracy of scalar product follows

 

Angular velocity as a vector field

Since the spin angular velocity tensor of a rigid body (in its rest frame) is a linear transformation that maps positions to velocities (within the rigid body), it can be regarded as a constant vector field. In particular, the spin angular velocity is a Killing vector field belonging to an element of the Lie algebra SO(3) of the 3-dimensional rotation group SO(3).

Also, it can be shown that the spin angular velocity vector field is exactly half of the curl of the linear velocity vector field v(r) of the rigid body. In symbols,

 

Rigid body considerations

 
Position of point P located in the rigid body (shown in blue). Ri is the position with respect to the lab frame, centered at O and ri is the position with respect to the rigid body frame, centered at O. The origin of the rigid body frame is at vector position R from the lab frame.

The same equations for the angular speed can be obtained reasoning over a rotating rigid body. Here is not assumed that the rigid body rotates around the origin. Instead, it can be supposed rotating around an arbitrary point that is moving with a linear velocity V(t) in each instant.

To obtain the equations, it is convenient to imagine a rigid body attached to the frames and consider a coordinate system that is fixed with respect to the rigid body. Then we will study the coordinate transformations between this coordinate and the fixed "laboratory" system.

As shown in the figure on the right, the lab system's origin is at point O, the rigid body system origin is at O and the vector from O to O is R. A particle (i) in the rigid body is located at point P and the vector position of this particle is Ri in the lab frame, and at position ri in the body frame. It is seen that the position of the particle can be written:

 

The defining characteristic of a rigid body is that the distance between any two points in a rigid body is unchanging in time. This means that the length of the vector   is unchanging. By Euler's rotation theorem, we may replace the vector   with   where   is a 3×3 rotation matrix and   is the position of the particle at some fixed point in time, say t = 0. This replacement is useful, because now it is only the rotation matrix   that is changing in time and not the reference vector  , as the rigid body rotates about point O. Also, since the three columns of the rotation matrix represent the three versors of a reference frame rotating together with the rigid body, any rotation about any axis becomes now visible, while the vector   would not rotate if the rotation axis were parallel to it, and hence it would only describe a rotation about an axis perpendicular to it (i.e., it would not see the component of the angular velocity pseudovector parallel to it, and would only allow the computation of the component perpendicular to it). The position of the particle is now written as:

 

Taking the time derivative yields the velocity of the particle:

 

where Vi is the velocity of the particle (in the lab frame) and V is the velocity of O (the origin of the rigid body frame). Since   is a rotation matrix its inverse is its transpose. So we substitute  :

 
 
 

or

 

where   is the previous angular velocity tensor.

It can be proved that this is a skew symmetric matrix, so we can take its dual to get a 3 dimensional pseudovector that is precisely the previous angular velocity vector  :

 

Substituting ω for W into the above velocity expression, and replacing matrix multiplication by an equivalent cross product:

 

It can be seen that the velocity of a point in a rigid body can be divided into two terms – the velocity of a reference point fixed in the rigid body plus the cross product term involving the orbital angular velocity of the particle with respect to the reference point. This angular velocity is what physicists call the "spin angular velocity" of the rigid body, as opposed to the orbital angular velocity of the reference point O about the origin O.

Consistency

We have supposed that the rigid body rotates around an arbitrary point. We should prove that the spin angular velocity previously defined is independent of the choice of origin, which means that the spin angular velocity is an intrinsic property of the spinning rigid body. (Note the marked contrast of this with the orbital angular velocity of a point particle, which certainly does depend on the choice of origin.)

 
Proving the independence of spin angular velocity from choice of origin

See the graph to the right: The origin of lab frame is O, while O1 and O2 are two fixed points on the rigid body, whose velocity is   and   respectively. Suppose the angular velocity with respect to O1 and O2 is   and   respectively. Since point P and O2 have only one velocity,

 
 

The above two yields that

 

Since the point P (and thus  ) is arbitrary, it follows that

 

If the reference point is the instantaneous axis of rotation the expression of the velocity of a point in the rigid body will have just the angular velocity term. This is because the velocity of the instantaneous axis of rotation is zero. An example of the instantaneous axis of rotation is the hinge of a door. Another example is the point of contact of a purely rolling spherical (or, more generally, convex) rigid body.

See also

References

  1. ^ Cummings, Karen; Halliday, David (2007). Understanding physics. New Delhi: John Wiley & Sons Inc., authorized reprint to Wiley – India. pp. 449, 484, 485, 487. ISBN 978-81-265-0882-2.(UP1)
  2. ^ Taylor, Barry N. (2009). International System of Units (SI) (revised 2008 ed.). DIANE Publishing. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-4379-1558-7. Extract of page 27
  3. ^ "Units with special names and symbols; units that incorporate special names and symbols".
  4. ^ Hibbeler, Russell C. (2009). Engineering Mechanics. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. pp. 314, 153. ISBN 978-0-13-607791-6.(EM1)
  5. ^ Singh, Sunil K. Angular Velocity. Rice University. Retrieved 21 May 2021 – via OpenStax.
  6. ^ K.S.HEDRIH: Leonhard Euler (1707–1783) and rigid body dynamics
  7. ^ Rotations and Angular Momentum on the Classical Mechanics page of the website of John Baez, especially Questions 1 and 2.

External links

  • A college text-book of physics By Arthur Lalanne Kimball (Angular Velocity of a particle)
  • Pickering, Steve (2009). "ω Speed of Rotation [Angular Velocity]". Sixty Symbols. Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham.

angular, velocity, physics, angular, velocity, symbol, sometimes, also, known, angular, frequency, vector, pseudovector, representation, angular, position, orientation, object, changes, with, time, quickly, object, rotates, spins, revolves, around, axis, rotat. In physics angular velocity symbol w sometimes W also known as angular frequency vector 1 is a pseudovector representation of how the angular position or orientation of an object changes with time i e how quickly an object rotates spins or revolves around an axis of rotation and how fast the axis itself changes direction Angular velocityCommon symbolswSI unitrad s 1In SI base unitss 1Extensive yesIntensive yes for rigid body only Conserved noBehaviour undercoord transformationpseudovectorDerivations fromother quantitiesw d8 dtDimensionT 1 displaystyle mathsf T 1 The magnitude of the pseudovector w w displaystyle omega boldsymbol omega represents the angular speed or angular frequency the rate at which the object rotates spins or revolves The pseudovector direction w w w displaystyle hat boldsymbol omega boldsymbol omega omega is normal to the instantaneous plane of rotation or angular displacement There are two types of angular velocity Orbital angular velocity refers to how fast a point object revolves about a fixed origin i e the time rate of change of its angular position relative to the origin citation needed Spin angular velocity refers to how fast a rigid body rotates with respect to its center of rotation and is independent of the choice of origin in contrast to orbital angular velocity Angular velocity has dimension of angle per unit time this is analogous to linear velocity with angle replacing distance with time in common The SI unit of angular velocity is radians per second 2 although degrees per second s is also common The radian is a dimensionless quantity thus the SI units of angular velocity are dimensionally equivalent to reciprocal seconds s 1 although rad s is preferable 3 The sense of angular velocity is conventionally specified by the right hand rule implying clockwise rotations as viewed on the plane of rotation negation multiplication by 1 leaves the magnitude unchanged but flips the axis in the opposite direction 4 For example a geostationary satellite completes one orbit per day above the equator 360 degrees per 24 hours has angular velocity magnitude angular speed w 360 24 h 15 h or 2p rad 24 h 0 26 rad h and angular velocity direction a unit vector parallel to Earth s rotation axis w Z displaystyle hat omega hat Z in the geocentric coordinate system If angle is measured in radians the linear velocity is the radius times the angular velocity v r w displaystyle boldsymbol v r boldsymbol omega With orbital radius 42 000 km from the earth s center the satellite s tangential speed through space is thus v 42 000 km 0 26 h 11 000 km h The angular velocity is positive since the satellite travels eastward with the Earth s rotation counter clockwise from above the north pole Contents 1 Orbital angular velocity of a point particle 1 1 Particle in two dimensions 1 2 Particle in three dimensions 2 Spin angular velocity of a rigid body or reference frame 2 1 Components from the basis vectors of a body fixed frame 2 2 Components from Euler angles 3 Tensor 3 1 Calculation of angular velocity tensor of a rotating frame 4 Properties 4 1 Duality with respect to the velocity vector 4 2 Exponential of W 4 3 W is skew symmetric 4 4 Coordinate free description 4 5 Angular velocity as a vector field 5 Rigid body considerations 5 1 Consistency 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrbital angular velocity of a point particle EditParticle in two dimensions Edit The angular velocity of the particle at P with respect to the origin O is determined by the perpendicular component of the velocity vector v In the simplest case of circular motion at radius r displaystyle r with position given by the angular displacement ϕ t displaystyle phi t from the x axis the orbital angular velocity is the rate of change of angle with respect to time w d ϕ d t textstyle omega frac d phi dt If ϕ displaystyle phi is measured in radians the arc length from the positive x axis around the circle to the particle is ℓ r ϕ displaystyle ell r phi and the linear velocity is v t d ℓ d t r w t textstyle v t frac d ell dt r omega t so that w v r textstyle omega frac v r In the general case of a particle moving in the plane the orbital angular velocity is the rate at which the position vector relative to a chosen origin sweeps out angle The diagram shows the position vector r displaystyle mathbf r from the origin O displaystyle O to a particle P displaystyle P with its polar coordinates r ϕ displaystyle r phi All variables are functions of time t displaystyle t The particle has linear velocity splitting as v v v displaystyle mathbf v mathbf v mathbf v perp with the radial component v displaystyle mathbf v parallel to the radius and the cross radial or tangential component v displaystyle mathbf v perp perpendicular to the radius When there is no radial component the particle moves around the origin in a circle but when there is no cross radial component it moves in a straight line from the origin Since radial motion leaves the angle unchanged only the cross radial component of linear velocity contributes to angular velocity The angular velocity w is the rate of change of angular position with respect to time which can be computed from the cross radial velocity as w d ϕ d t v r displaystyle omega frac d phi dt frac v perp r Here the cross radial speed v displaystyle v perp is the signed magnitude of v displaystyle mathbf v perp positive for counter clockwise motion negative for clockwise Taking polar coordinates for the linear velocity v displaystyle mathbf v gives magnitude v displaystyle v linear speed and angle 8 displaystyle theta relative to the radius vector in these terms v v sin 8 displaystyle v perp v sin theta so that w v sin 8 r displaystyle omega frac v sin theta r These formulas may be derived doing r r cos f r sin f displaystyle mathbf r r cos varphi r sin varphi being r displaystyle r a function of the distance to the origin with respect to time and f displaystyle varphi a function of the angle between the vector and the x axis Then d r d t r cos f r f sin f r sin f r f cos f textstyle frac d mathbf r dt dot r cos varphi r dot varphi sin varphi dot r sin varphi r dot varphi cos varphi Which is equal to r cos f sin f r f sin f cos f r r r f f displaystyle dot r cos varphi sin varphi r dot varphi sin varphi cos varphi dot r hat r r dot varphi hat varphi See Unit vector in cylindrical coordinates Knowing d r d t v textstyle frac d mathbf r dt mathbf v we conclude that the radial component of the velocity is given by r displaystyle dot r because r displaystyle hat r is a radial unit vector and the perpendicular component is given by r f displaystyle r dot varphi because f displaystyle hat varphi is a perpendicular unit vector In two dimensions angular velocity is a number with plus or minus sign indicating orientation but not pointing in a direction The sign is conventionally taken to be positive if the radius vector turns counter clockwise and negative if clockwise Angular velocity then may be termed a pseudoscalar a numerical quantity which changes sign under a parity inversion such as inverting one axis or switching the two axes Particle in three dimensions Edit The orbital angular velocity vector encodes the time rate of change of angular position as well as the instantaneous plane of angular displacement In this case counter clockwise circular motion the vector points up In three dimensional space we again have the position vector r of a moving particle Here orbital angular velocity is a pseudovector whose magnitude is the rate at which r sweeps out angle and whose direction is perpendicular to the instantaneous plane in which r sweeps out angle i e the plane spanned by r and v However as there are two directions perpendicular to any plane an additional condition is necessary to uniquely specify the direction of the angular velocity conventionally the right hand rule is used Let the pseudovector u displaystyle mathbf u be the unit vector perpendicular to the plane spanned by r and v so that the right hand rule is satisfied i e the instantaneous direction of angular displacement is counter clockwise looking from the top of u displaystyle mathbf u Taking polar coordinates r ϕ displaystyle r phi in this plane as in the two dimensional case above one may define the orbital angular velocity vector as w w u d ϕ d t u v sin 8 r u displaystyle boldsymbol omega omega mathbf u frac d phi dt mathbf u frac v sin theta r mathbf u where 8 is the angle between r and v In terms of the cross product this is w r v r 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega frac mathbf r times mathbf v r 2 5 From the above equation one can recover the tangential velocity as v w r displaystyle mathbf v perp boldsymbol omega times mathbf r Spin angular velocity of a rigid body or reference frame EditGiven a rotating frame of three unit coordinate vectors all the three must have the same angular speed at each instant In such a frame each vector may be considered as a moving particle with constant scalar radius The rotating frame appears in the context of rigid bodies and special tools have been developed for it the spin angular velocity may be described as a vector or equivalently as a tensor Consistent with the general definition the spin angular velocity of a frame is defined as the orbital angular velocity of any of the three vectors same for all with respect to its own center of rotation The addition of angular velocity vectors for frames is also defined by the usual vector addition composition of linear movements and can be useful to decompose the rotation as in a gimbal All components of the vector can be calculated as derivatives of the parameters defining the moving frames Euler angles or rotation matrices As in the general case addition is commutative w 1 w 2 w 2 w 1 displaystyle omega 1 omega 2 omega 2 omega 1 By Euler s rotation theorem any rotating frame possesses an instantaneous axis of rotation which is the direction of the angular velocity vector and the magnitude of the angular velocity is consistent with the two dimensional case If we choose a reference point R displaystyle boldsymbol R fixed in the rigid body the velocity r displaystyle dot boldsymbol r of any point in the body is given by r R w r R displaystyle dot boldsymbol r dot boldsymbol R boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol r boldsymbol R Components from the basis vectors of a body fixed frame Edit Consider a rigid body rotating about a fixed point O Construct a reference frame in the body consisting of an orthonormal set of vectors e 1 e 2 e 3 displaystyle mathbf e 1 mathbf e 2 mathbf e 3 fixed to the body and with their common origin at O The spin angular velocity vector of both frame and body about O is then w e 1 e 2 e 3 e 2 e 3 e 1 e 3 e 1 e 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega left dot mathbf e 1 cdot mathbf e 2 right mathbf e 3 left dot mathbf e 2 cdot mathbf e 3 right mathbf e 1 left dot mathbf e 3 cdot mathbf e 1 right mathbf e 2 where e i d e i d t displaystyle dot mathbf e i frac d mathbf e i dt is the time rate of change of the frame vector e i i 1 2 3 displaystyle mathbf e i i 1 2 3 due to the rotation This formula is incompatible with the expression for orbital angular velocity w r v r 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega frac mathbf r times mathbf v r 2 as that formula defines angular velocity for a single point about O while the formula in this section applies to a frame or rigid body In the case of a rigid body a single w displaystyle boldsymbol omega has to account for the motion of all particles in the body Components from Euler angles Edit Diagram showing Euler frame in greenThe components of the spin angular velocity pseudovector were first calculated by Leonhard Euler using his Euler angles and the use of an intermediate frame One axis of the reference frame the precession axis The line of nodes of the moving frame with respect to the reference frame nutation axis One axis of the moving frame the intrinsic rotation axis Euler proved that the projections of the angular velocity pseudovector on each of these three axes is the derivative of its associated angle which is equivalent to decomposing the instantaneous rotation into three instantaneous Euler rotations Therefore 6 w a u 1 b u 2 g u 3 displaystyle boldsymbol omega dot alpha mathbf u 1 dot beta mathbf u 2 dot gamma mathbf u 3 This basis is not orthonormal and it is difficult to use but now the velocity vector can be changed to the fixed frame or to the moving frame with just a change of bases For example changing to the mobile frame w a sin b sin g b cos g i a sin b cos g b sin g j a cos b g k displaystyle boldsymbol omega dot alpha sin beta sin gamma dot beta cos gamma hat mathbf i dot alpha sin beta cos gamma dot beta sin gamma hat mathbf j dot alpha cos beta dot gamma hat mathbf k where i j k displaystyle hat mathbf i hat mathbf j hat mathbf k are unit vectors for the frame fixed in the moving body This example has been made using the Z X Z convention for Euler angles citation needed Tensor EditSee also Skew symmetric matrix The angular velocity vector w w x w y w z displaystyle boldsymbol omega omega x omega y omega z defined above may be equivalently expressed as an angular velocity tensor the matrix or linear mapping W W t defined by W 0 w z w y w z 0 w x w y w x 0 displaystyle W begin pmatrix 0 amp omega z amp omega y omega z amp 0 amp omega x omega y amp omega x amp 0 end pmatrix This is an infinitesimal rotation matrix The linear mapping W acts as w displaystyle boldsymbol omega times w r W r displaystyle boldsymbol omega times mathbf r W mathbf r Calculation of angular velocity tensor of a rotating frame Edit A vector r displaystyle mathbf r undergoing uniform circular motion around a fixed axis satisfies d r d t w r W r displaystyle frac d mathbf r dt boldsymbol omega times mathbf r W mathbf r Let A t e 1 t e 2 t e 3 t displaystyle A t mathbf e 1 t mathbf e 2 t mathbf e 3 t be the orientation matrix of a frame whose columns e 1 displaystyle mathbf e 1 e 2 displaystyle mathbf e 2 and e 3 displaystyle mathbf e 3 are the moving orthonormal coordinate vectors of the frame We can obtain the angular velocity tensor W t of A t as follows The angular velocity w displaystyle omega must be the same for each of the column vectors e i displaystyle mathbf e i so we have d A d t d e 1 d t d e 2 d t d e 3 d t w e 1 w e 2 w e 3 W e 1 W e 2 W e 3 W A displaystyle begin aligned frac dA dt amp begin bmatrix dfrac d mathbf e 1 dt amp dfrac d mathbf e 2 dt amp dfrac d mathbf e 3 dt end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix omega times mathbf e 1 amp omega times mathbf e 2 amp omega times mathbf e 3 end bmatrix amp begin bmatrix W mathbf e 1 amp W mathbf e 2 amp W mathbf e 3 end bmatrix amp WA end aligned which holds even if A t does not rotate uniformly Therefore the angular velocity tensor is W d A d t A 1 d A d t A T displaystyle W frac dA dt A 1 frac dA dt A mathsf T since the inverse of an orthogonal matrix A displaystyle A is its transpose A T displaystyle A mathsf T Properties EditSee also Infinitesimal rotation In general the angular velocity in an n dimensional space is the time derivative of the angular displacement tensor which is a second rank skew symmetric tensor This tensor W will have n n 1 2 independent components which is the dimension of the Lie algebra of the Lie group of rotations of an n dimensional inner product space 7 Duality with respect to the velocity vector Edit In three dimensions angular velocity can be represented by a pseudovector because second rank tensors are dual to pseudovectors in three dimensions Since the angular velocity tensor W W t is a skew symmetric matrix W 0 w z w y w z 0 w x w y w x 0 displaystyle W begin pmatrix 0 amp omega z amp omega y omega z amp 0 amp omega x omega y amp omega x amp 0 end pmatrix its Hodge dual is a vector which is precisely the previous angular velocity vector w w x w y w z displaystyle boldsymbol omega omega x omega y omega z Exponential of W Edit If we know an initial frame A 0 and we are given a constant angular velocity tensor W we can obtain A t for any given t Recall the matrix differential equation d A d t W A displaystyle frac dA dt W cdot A This equation can be integrated to give A t e W t A 0 displaystyle A t e Wt A 0 which shows a connection with the Lie group of rotations W is skew symmetric Edit We prove that angular velocity tensor is skew symmetric i e W d A t d t A T displaystyle W frac dA t dt cdot A text T satisfies W T W displaystyle W text T W A rotation matrix A is orthogonal inverse to its transpose so we have I A A T displaystyle I A cdot A text T For A A t displaystyle A A t a frame matrix taking the time derivative of the equation gives 0 d A d t A T A d A T d t displaystyle 0 frac dA dt A text T A frac dA text T dt Applying the formula A B T B T A T displaystyle AB text T B text T A text T 0 d A d t A T d A d t A T T W W T displaystyle 0 frac dA dt A text T left frac dA dt A text T right text T W W text T Thus W is the negative of its transpose which implies it is skew symmetric Coordinate free description Edit At any instant t displaystyle t the angular velocity tensor represents a linear map between the position vector r t displaystyle mathbf r t and the velocity vectors v t displaystyle mathbf v t of a point on a rigid body rotating around the origin v W r displaystyle mathbf v W mathbf r The relation between this linear map and the angular velocity pseudovector w displaystyle boldsymbol omega is the following Because W is the derivative of an orthogonal transformation the bilinear form B r s W r s displaystyle B mathbf r mathbf s W mathbf r cdot mathbf s is skew symmetric Thus we can apply the fact of exterior algebra that there is a unique linear form L displaystyle L on L 2 V displaystyle Lambda 2 V that L r s B r s displaystyle L mathbf r wedge mathbf s B mathbf r mathbf s where r s L 2 V displaystyle mathbf r wedge mathbf s in Lambda 2 V is the exterior product of r displaystyle mathbf r and s displaystyle mathbf s Taking the sharp L of L we get W r s L r s displaystyle W mathbf r cdot mathbf s L sharp cdot mathbf r wedge mathbf s Introducing w L displaystyle boldsymbol omega star L sharp as the Hodge dual of L and applying the definition of the Hodge dual twice supposing that the preferred unit 3 vector is 1 displaystyle star 1 W r s L r s w r s w r s w r s displaystyle W mathbf r cdot mathbf s star star L sharp wedge mathbf r wedge mathbf s star boldsymbol omega wedge mathbf r wedge mathbf s star boldsymbol omega wedge mathbf r cdot mathbf s boldsymbol omega times mathbf r cdot mathbf s where w r w r displaystyle boldsymbol omega times mathbf r star boldsymbol omega wedge mathbf r by definition Because s displaystyle mathbf s is an arbitrary vector from nondegeneracy of scalar product follows W r w r displaystyle W mathbf r boldsymbol omega times mathbf r Angular velocity as a vector field Edit Since the spin angular velocity tensor of a rigid body in its rest frame is a linear transformation that maps positions to velocities within the rigid body it can be regarded as a constant vector field In particular the spin angular velocity is a Killing vector field belonging to an element of the Lie algebra SO 3 of the 3 dimensional rotation group SO 3 Also it can be shown that the spin angular velocity vector field is exactly half of the curl of the linear velocity vector field v r of the rigid body In symbols w 1 2 v displaystyle boldsymbol omega frac 1 2 nabla times mathbf v Rigid body considerations EditSee also axes conventions Position of point P located in the rigid body shown in blue Ri is the position with respect to the lab frame centered at O and ri is the position with respect to the rigid body frame centered at O The origin of the rigid body frame is at vector position R from the lab frame The same equations for the angular speed can be obtained reasoning over a rotating rigid body Here is not assumed that the rigid body rotates around the origin Instead it can be supposed rotating around an arbitrary point that is moving with a linear velocity V t in each instant To obtain the equations it is convenient to imagine a rigid body attached to the frames and consider a coordinate system that is fixed with respect to the rigid body Then we will study the coordinate transformations between this coordinate and the fixed laboratory system As shown in the figure on the right the lab system s origin is at point O the rigid body system origin is at O and the vector from O to O is R A particle i in the rigid body is located at point P and the vector position of this particle is Ri in the lab frame and at position ri in the body frame It is seen that the position of the particle can be written R i R r i displaystyle mathbf R i mathbf R mathbf r i The defining characteristic of a rigid body is that the distance between any two points in a rigid body is unchanging in time This means that the length of the vector r i displaystyle mathbf r i is unchanging By Euler s rotation theorem we may replace the vector r i displaystyle mathbf r i with R r i o displaystyle mathcal R mathbf r io where R displaystyle mathcal R is a 3 3 rotation matrix and r i o displaystyle mathbf r io is the position of the particle at some fixed point in time say t 0 This replacement is useful because now it is only the rotation matrix R displaystyle mathcal R that is changing in time and not the reference vector r i o displaystyle mathbf r io as the rigid body rotates about point O Also since the three columns of the rotation matrix represent the three versors of a reference frame rotating together with the rigid body any rotation about any axis becomes now visible while the vector r i displaystyle mathbf r i would not rotate if the rotation axis were parallel to it and hence it would only describe a rotation about an axis perpendicular to it i e it would not see the component of the angular velocity pseudovector parallel to it and would only allow the computation of the component perpendicular to it The position of the particle is now written as R i R R r i o displaystyle mathbf R i mathbf R mathcal R mathbf r io Taking the time derivative yields the velocity of the particle V i V d R d t r i o displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V frac d mathcal R dt mathbf r io where Vi is the velocity of the particle in the lab frame and V is the velocity of O the origin of the rigid body frame Since R displaystyle mathcal R is a rotation matrix its inverse is its transpose So we substitute I R T R displaystyle mathcal I mathcal R text T mathcal R V i V d R d t I r i o displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V frac d mathcal R dt mathcal I mathbf r io V i V d R d t R T R r i o displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V frac d mathcal R dt mathcal R text T mathcal R mathbf r io V i V d R d t R T r i displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V frac d mathcal R dt mathcal R text T mathbf r i or V i V W r i displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V W mathbf r i where W d R d t R T displaystyle W frac d mathcal R dt mathcal R text T is the previous angular velocity tensor It can be proved that this is a skew symmetric matrix so we can take its dual to get a 3 dimensional pseudovector that is precisely the previous angular velocity vector w displaystyle boldsymbol omega w w x w y w z displaystyle boldsymbol omega omega x omega y omega z Substituting w for W into the above velocity expression and replacing matrix multiplication by an equivalent cross product V i V w r i displaystyle mathbf V i mathbf V boldsymbol omega times mathbf r i It can be seen that the velocity of a point in a rigid body can be divided into two terms the velocity of a reference point fixed in the rigid body plus the cross product term involving the orbital angular velocity of the particle with respect to the reference point This angular velocity is what physicists call the spin angular velocity of the rigid body as opposed to the orbital angular velocity of the reference point O about the origin O Consistency Edit We have supposed that the rigid body rotates around an arbitrary point We should prove that the spin angular velocity previously defined is independent of the choice of origin which means that the spin angular velocity is an intrinsic property of the spinning rigid body Note the marked contrast of this with the orbital angular velocity of a point particle which certainly does depend on the choice of origin Proving the independence of spin angular velocity from choice of originSee the graph to the right The origin of lab frame is O while O1 and O2 are two fixed points on the rigid body whose velocity is v 1 displaystyle mathbf v 1 and v 2 displaystyle mathbf v 2 respectively Suppose the angular velocity with respect to O1 and O2 is w 1 displaystyle boldsymbol omega 1 and w 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega 2 respectively Since point P and O2 have only one velocity v 1 w 1 r 1 v 2 w 2 r 2 displaystyle mathbf v 1 boldsymbol omega 1 times mathbf r 1 mathbf v 2 boldsymbol omega 2 times mathbf r 2 v 2 v 1 w 1 r v 1 w 1 r 1 r 2 displaystyle mathbf v 2 mathbf v 1 boldsymbol omega 1 times mathbf r mathbf v 1 boldsymbol omega 1 times mathbf r 1 mathbf r 2 The above two yields that w 2 w 1 r 2 0 displaystyle boldsymbol omega 2 boldsymbol omega 1 times mathbf r 2 0 Since the point P and thus r 2 displaystyle mathbf r 2 is arbitrary it follows that w 1 w 2 displaystyle boldsymbol omega 1 boldsymbol omega 2 If the reference point is the instantaneous axis of rotation the expression of the velocity of a point in the rigid body will have just the angular velocity term This is because the velocity of the instantaneous axis of rotation is zero An example of the instantaneous axis of rotation is the hinge of a door Another example is the point of contact of a purely rolling spherical or more generally convex rigid body See also EditAngular acceleration Angular frequency Angular momentum Areal velocity Isometry Orthogonal group Rigid body dynamics VorticityReferences Edit Cummings Karen Halliday David 2007 Understanding physics New Delhi John Wiley amp Sons Inc authorized reprint to Wiley India pp 449 484 485 487 ISBN 978 81 265 0882 2 UP1 Taylor Barry N 2009 International System of Units SI revised 2008 ed DIANE Publishing p 27 ISBN 978 1 4379 1558 7 Extract of page 27 Units with special names and symbols units that incorporate special names and symbols Hibbeler Russell C 2009 Engineering Mechanics Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall pp 314 153 ISBN 978 0 13 607791 6 EM1 Singh Sunil K Angular Velocity Rice University Retrieved 21 May 2021 via OpenStax K S HEDRIH Leonhard Euler 1707 1783 and rigid body dynamics Rotations and Angular Momentum on the Classical Mechanics page of the website of John Baez especially Questions 1 and 2 Symon Keith 1971 Mechanics Addison Wesley Reading MA ISBN 978 0 201 07392 8 Landau L D Lifshitz E M 1997 Mechanics Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 2896 9 External links Edit Look up angular velocity in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Angular velocity A college text book of physics By Arthur Lalanne Kimball Angular Velocity of a particle Pickering Steve 2009 w Speed of Rotation Angular Velocity Sixty Symbols Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Angular velocity amp oldid 1171511916, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.