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Center of mass

In physics, the center of mass of a distribution of mass in space (sometimes referred to as the balance point) is the unique point at any given time where the weighted relative position of the distributed mass sums to zero. This is the point to which a force may be applied to cause a linear acceleration without an angular acceleration. Calculations in mechanics are often simplified when formulated with respect to the center of mass. It is a hypothetical point where the entire mass of an object may be assumed to be concentrated to visualise its motion. In other words, the center of mass is the particle equivalent of a given object for application of Newton's laws of motion.

This toy uses the principles of center of mass to keep balance when sitting on a finger.

In the case of a single rigid body, the center of mass is fixed in relation to the body, and if the body has uniform density, it will be located at the centroid. The center of mass may be located outside the physical body, as is sometimes the case for hollow or open-shaped objects, such as a horseshoe. In the case of a distribution of separate bodies, such as the planets of the Solar System, the center of mass may not correspond to the position of any individual member of the system.

The center of mass is a useful reference point for calculations in mechanics that involve masses distributed in space, such as the linear and angular momentum of planetary bodies and rigid body dynamics. In orbital mechanics, the equations of motion of planets are formulated as point masses located at the centers of mass. The center of mass frame is an inertial frame in which the center of mass of a system is at rest with respect to the origin of the coordinate system.

History

The concept of center of gravity or weight was studied extensively by the ancient Greek mathematician, physicist, and engineer Archimedes of Syracuse. He worked with simplified assumptions about gravity that amount to a uniform field, thus arriving at the mathematical properties of what we now call the center of mass. Archimedes showed that the torque exerted on a lever by weights resting at various points along the lever is the same as what it would be if all of the weights were moved to a single point—their center of mass. In his work On Floating Bodies, Archimedes demonstrated that the orientation of a floating object is the one that makes its center of mass as low as possible. He developed mathematical techniques for finding the centers of mass of objects of uniform density of various well-defined shapes.[1]

Other ancient mathematicians who contributed to the theory of the center of mass include Hero of Alexandria and Pappus of Alexandria. In the Renaissance and Early Modern periods, work by Guido Ubaldi, Francesco Maurolico,[2] Federico Commandino,[3] Evangelista Torricelli, Simon Stevin,[4] Luca Valerio,[5] Jean-Charles de la Faille, Paul Guldin,[6] John Wallis, Christiaan Huygens,[7] Louis Carré, Pierre Varignon, and Alexis Clairaut expanded the concept further.[8]

Newton's second law is reformulated with respect to the center of mass in Euler's first law.[9]

Definition

The center of mass is the unique point at the center of a distribution of mass in space that has the property that the weighted position vectors relative to this point sum to zero. In analogy to statistics, the center of mass is the mean location of a distribution of mass in space.

A system of particles

In the case of a system of particles Pi, i = 1, ..., n, each with mass mi that are located in space with coordinates ri, i = 1, ..., n, the coordinates R of the center of mass satisfy the condition

 

Solving this equation for R yields the formula

 
where   is the total mass of all of the particles.

A continuous volume

If the mass distribution is continuous with the density ρ(r) within a solid Q, then the integral of the weighted position coordinates of the points in this volume relative to the center of mass R over the volume V is zero, that is

 

Solve this equation for the coordinates R to obtain

 
where M is the total mass in the volume.

If a continuous mass distribution has uniform density, which means that ρ is constant, then the center of mass is the same as the centroid of the volume.[10]

Barycentric coordinates

The coordinates R of the center of mass of a two-particle system, P1 and P2, with masses m1 and m2 is given by

 

Let the percentage of the total mass divided between these two particles vary from 100% P1 and 0% P2 through 50% P1 and 50% P2 to 0% P1 and 100% P2, then the center of mass R moves along the line from P1 to P2. The percentages of mass at each point can be viewed as projective coordinates of the point R on this line, and are termed barycentric coordinates. Another way of interpreting the process here is the mechanical balancing of moments about an arbitrary point. The numerator gives the total moment that is then balanced by an equivalent total force at the center of mass. This can be generalized to three points and four points to define projective coordinates in the plane, and in space, respectively.

Systems with periodic boundary conditions

For particles in a system with periodic boundary conditions two particles can be neighbours even though they are on opposite sides of the system. This occurs often in molecular dynamics simulations, for example, in which clusters form at random locations and sometimes neighbouring atoms cross the periodic boundary. When a cluster straddles the periodic boundary, a naive calculation of the center of mass will be incorrect. A generalized method for calculating the center of mass for periodic systems is to treat each coordinate, x and y and/or z, as if it were on a circle instead of a line.[11] The calculation takes every particle's x coordinate and maps it to an angle,

 
where xmax is the system size in the x direction and  . From this angle, two new points   can be generated, which can be weighted by the mass of the particle   for the center of mass or given a value of 1 for the geometric center:
 

In the   plane, these coordinates lie on a circle of radius 1. From the collection of   and   values from all the particles, the averages   and   are calculated.

 
where M is the sum of the masses of all of the particles.

These values are mapped back into a new angle,  , from which the x coordinate of the center of mass can be obtained:

 

The process can be repeated for all dimensions of the system to determine the complete center of mass. The utility of the algorithm is that it allows the mathematics to determine where the "best" center of mass is, instead of guessing or using cluster analysis to "unfold" a cluster straddling the periodic boundaries. If both average values are zero,  , then   is undefined. This is a correct result, because it only occurs when all particles are exactly evenly spaced. In that condition, their x coordinates are mathematically identical in a periodic system.

Center of gravity

 
Diagram of an educational toy that balances on a point: the center of mass (C) settles below its support (P)

A body's center of gravity is the point around which the resultant torque due to gravity forces vanishes. Where a gravity field can be considered to be uniform, the mass-center and the center-of-gravity will be the same. However, for satellites in orbit around a planet, in the absence of other torques being applied to a satellite, the slight variation (gradient) in gravitational field between closer-to (stronger) and further-from (weaker) the planet can lead to a torque that will tend to align the satellite such that its long axis is vertical. In such a case, it is important to make the distinction between the center-of-gravity and the mass-center. Any horizontal offset between the two will result in an applied torque.

It is useful to note that the mass-center is a fixed property for a given rigid body (e.g. with no slosh or articulation), whereas the center-of-gravity may, in addition, depend upon its orientation in a non-uniform gravitational field. In the latter case, the center-of-gravity will always be located somewhat closer to the main attractive body as compared to the mass-center, and thus will change its position in the body of interest as its orientation is changed.

In the study of the dynamics of aircraft, vehicles and vessels, forces and moments need to be resolved relative to the mass center. That is true independent of whether gravity itself is a consideration. Referring to the mass-center as the center-of-gravity is something of a colloquialism, but it is in common usage and when gravity gradient effects are negligible, center-of-gravity and mass-center are the same and are used interchangeably.

In physics the benefits of using the center of mass to model a mass distribution can be seen by considering the resultant of the gravity forces on a continuous body. Consider a body Q of volume V with density ρ(r) at each point r in the volume. In a parallel gravity field the force f at each point r is given by,

 
where dm is the mass at the point r, g is the acceleration of gravity, and   is a unit vector defining the vertical direction.

Choose a reference point R in the volume and compute the resultant force and torque at this point,

 
and
 

If the reference point R is chosen so that it is the center of mass, then

 
which means the resultant torque T = 0. Because the resultant torque is zero the body will move as though it is a particle with its mass concentrated at the center of mass.

By selecting the center of gravity as the reference point for a rigid body, the gravity forces will not cause the body to rotate, which means the weight of the body can be considered to be concentrated at the center of mass.

Linear and angular momentum

The linear and angular momentum of a collection of particles can be simplified by measuring the position and velocity of the particles relative to the center of mass. Let the system of particles Pi, i = 1, ..., n of masses mi be located at the coordinates ri with velocities vi. Select a reference point R and compute the relative position and velocity vectors,

 

The total linear momentum and angular momentum of the system are

 
and
 

If R is chosen as the center of mass these equations simplify to

 
where m is the total mass of all the particles, p is the linear momentum, and L is the angular momentum.

The law of conservation of momentum predicts that for any system not subjected to external forces the momentum of the system will remain constant, which means the center of mass will move with constant velocity. This applies for all systems with classical internal forces, including magnetic fields, electric fields, chemical reactions, and so on. More formally, this is true for any internal forces that cancel in accordance with Newton's Third Law.[12]

Locating the center of mass

 
Plumb line method

The experimental determination of a body's centre of mass makes use of gravity forces on the body and is based on the fact that the centre of mass is the same as the centre of gravity in the parallel gravity field near the earth's surface.

The center of mass of a body with an axis of symmetry and constant density must lie on this axis. Thus, the center of mass of a circular cylinder of constant density has its center of mass on the axis of the cylinder. In the same way, the center of mass of a spherically symmetric body of constant density is at the center of the sphere. In general, for any symmetry of a body, its center of mass will be a fixed point of that symmetry.[13]

In two dimensions

An experimental method for locating the center of mass is to suspend the object from two locations and to drop plumb lines from the suspension points. The intersection of the two lines is the center of mass.[14]

The shape of an object might already be mathematically determined, but it may be too complex to use a known formula. In this case, one can subdivide the complex shape into simpler, more elementary shapes, whose centers of mass are easy to find. If the total mass and center of mass can be determined for each area, then the center of mass of the whole is the weighted average of the centers.[15] This method can even work for objects with holes, which can be accounted for as negative masses.[16]

A direct development of the planimeter known as an integraph, or integerometer, can be used to establish the position of the centroid or center of mass of an irregular two-dimensional shape. This method can be applied to a shape with an irregular, smooth or complex boundary where other methods are too difficult. It was regularly used by ship builders to compare with the required displacement and center of buoyancy of a ship, and ensure it would not capsize.[17][18]

In three dimensions

An experimental method to locate the three-dimensional coordinates of the center of mass begins by supporting the object at three points and measuring the forces, F1, F2, and F3 that resist the weight of the object,   (  is the unit vector in the vertical direction). Let r1, r2, and r3 be the position coordinates of the support points, then the coordinates R of the center of mass satisfy the condition that the resultant torque is zero,

 
or
 

This equation yields the coordinates of the center of mass R* in the horizontal plane as,

 

The center of mass lies on the vertical line L, given by

 

The three-dimensional coordinates of the center of mass are determined by performing this experiment twice with the object positioned so that these forces are measured for two different horizontal planes through the object. The center of mass will be the intersection of the two lines L1 and L2 obtained from the two experiments.

Applications

Engineering designs

Automotive applications

Engineers try to design a sports car so that its center of mass is lowered to make the car handle better, which is to say, maintain traction while executing relatively sharp turns.

The characteristic low profile of the U.S. military Humvee was designed in part to allow it to tilt farther than taller vehicles without rolling over, by ensuring its low center of mass stays over the space bounded by the four wheels even at angles far from the horizontal.

Aeronautics

The center of mass is an important point on an aircraft, which significantly affects the stability of the aircraft. To ensure the aircraft is stable enough to be safe to fly, the center of mass must fall within specified limits. If the center of mass is ahead of the forward limit, the aircraft will be less maneuverable, possibly to the point of being unable to rotate for takeoff or flare for landing.[19] If the center of mass is behind the aft limit, the aircraft will be more maneuverable, but also less stable, and possibly unstable enough so as to be impossible to fly. The moment arm of the elevator will also be reduced, which makes it more difficult to recover from a stalled condition.[20]

For helicopters in hover, the center of mass is always directly below the rotorhead. In forward flight, the center of mass will move forward to balance the negative pitch torque produced by applying cyclic control to propel the helicopter forward; consequently a cruising helicopter flies "nose-down" in level flight.[21]

Astronomy

 
Two bodies orbiting their barycenter (red cross)

The center of mass plays an important role in astronomy and astrophysics, where it is commonly referred to as the barycenter. The barycenter is the point between two objects where they balance each other; it is the center of mass where two or more celestial bodies orbit each other. When a moon orbits a planet, or a planet orbits a star, both bodies are actually orbiting a point that lies away from the center of the primary (larger) body.[22] For example, the Moon does not orbit the exact center of the Earth, but a point on a line between the center of the Earth and the Moon, approximately 1,710 km (1,062 miles) below the surface of the Earth, where their respective masses balance. This is the point about which the Earth and Moon orbit as they travel around the Sun. If the masses are more similar, e.g., Pluto and Charon, the barycenter will fall outside both bodies.

Rigging and safety

Knowing the location of the center of gravity when rigging is crucial, possibly resulting in severe injury or death if assumed incorrectly. A center of gravity that is at or above the lift point will most likely result in a tip-over incident. In general, the further the center of gravity below the pick point, the more safe the lift. There are other things to consider, such as shifting loads, strength of the load and mass, distance between pick points, and number of pick points. Specifically, when selecting lift points, it's very important to place the center of gravity at the center and well below the lift points.[23]

Body motion

In kinesiology and biomechanics, the center of mass is an important parameter that assists people in understanding their human locomotion. Typically, a human's center of mass is detected with one of two methods: the reaction board method is a static analysis that involves the person lying down on that instrument, and use of their static equilibrium equation to find their center of mass; the segmentation method relies on a mathematical solution based on the physical principle that the summation of the torques of individual body sections, relative to a specified axis, must equal the torque of the whole system that constitutes the body, measured relative to the same axis.[24]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Shore 2008, pp. 9–11.
  2. ^ Baron 2004, pp. 91–94.
  3. ^ Baron 2004, pp. 94–96.
  4. ^ Baron 2004, pp. 96–101.
  5. ^ Baron 2004, pp. 101–106.
  6. ^ Mancosu 1999, pp. 56–61.
  7. ^ Erlichson, H. (1996). "Christiaan Huygens' discovery of the center of oscillation formula". American Journal of Physics. 64 (5): 571–574. Bibcode:1996AmJPh..64..571E. doi:10.1119/1.18156. ISSN 0002-9505.
  8. ^ Walton 1855, p. 2.
  9. ^ Beatty 2006, p. 29.
  10. ^ Levi 2009, p. 85.
  11. ^ Bai & Breen 2008.
  12. ^ Kleppner & Kolenkow 1973, p. 117.
  13. ^ The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. I Ch. 19: Center of Mass; Moment of Inertia
  14. ^ Kleppner & Kolenkow 1973, pp. 119–120.
  15. ^ Feynman, Leighton & Sands 1963, pp. 19.1–19.2.
  16. ^ Hamill 2009, pp. 20–21.
  17. ^ "The theory and design of British shipbuilding". Amos Lowrey Ayre. p. 3. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  18. ^ Sangwin 2006, p. 7.
  19. ^ Federal Aviation Administration 2007, p. 1.4.
  20. ^ Federal Aviation Administration 2007, p. 1.3.
  21. ^ (PDF). p. 82. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
  22. ^ Murray & Dermott 1999, pp. 45–47.
  23. ^ "Structural Collapse Technician: Module 4 - Lifting and Rigging" (PDF). FEMA.gov. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  24. ^ Vint 2003, pp. 1–11.

References

External links

  • shows that the motion of the center of mass of an object in free fall is the same as the motion of a point object.
  • The Solar System's barycenter, simulations showing the effect each planet contributes to the Solar System's barycenter.

center, mass, physics, center, mass, distribution, mass, space, sometimes, referred, balance, point, unique, point, given, time, where, weighted, relative, position, distributed, mass, sums, zero, this, point, which, force, applied, cause, linear, acceleration. In physics the center of mass of a distribution of mass in space sometimes referred to as the balance point is the unique point at any given time where the weighted relative position of the distributed mass sums to zero This is the point to which a force may be applied to cause a linear acceleration without an angular acceleration Calculations in mechanics are often simplified when formulated with respect to the center of mass It is a hypothetical point where the entire mass of an object may be assumed to be concentrated to visualise its motion In other words the center of mass is the particle equivalent of a given object for application of Newton s laws of motion This toy uses the principles of center of mass to keep balance when sitting on a finger In the case of a single rigid body the center of mass is fixed in relation to the body and if the body has uniform density it will be located at the centroid The center of mass may be located outside the physical body as is sometimes the case for hollow or open shaped objects such as a horseshoe In the case of a distribution of separate bodies such as the planets of the Solar System the center of mass may not correspond to the position of any individual member of the system The center of mass is a useful reference point for calculations in mechanics that involve masses distributed in space such as the linear and angular momentum of planetary bodies and rigid body dynamics In orbital mechanics the equations of motion of planets are formulated as point masses located at the centers of mass The center of mass frame is an inertial frame in which the center of mass of a system is at rest with respect to the origin of the coordinate system Contents 1 History 2 Definition 2 1 A system of particles 2 2 A continuous volume 2 3 Barycentric coordinates 2 4 Systems with periodic boundary conditions 3 Center of gravity 4 Linear and angular momentum 5 Locating the center of mass 5 1 In two dimensions 5 2 In three dimensions 6 Applications 6 1 Engineering designs 6 1 1 Automotive applications 6 1 2 Aeronautics 6 2 Astronomy 6 3 Rigging and safety 6 4 Body motion 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe concept of center of gravity or weight was studied extensively by the ancient Greek mathematician physicist and engineer Archimedes of Syracuse He worked with simplified assumptions about gravity that amount to a uniform field thus arriving at the mathematical properties of what we now call the center of mass Archimedes showed that the torque exerted on a lever by weights resting at various points along the lever is the same as what it would be if all of the weights were moved to a single point their center of mass In his work On Floating Bodies Archimedes demonstrated that the orientation of a floating object is the one that makes its center of mass as low as possible He developed mathematical techniques for finding the centers of mass of objects of uniform density of various well defined shapes 1 Other ancient mathematicians who contributed to the theory of the center of mass include Hero of Alexandria and Pappus of Alexandria In the Renaissance and Early Modern periods work by Guido Ubaldi Francesco Maurolico 2 Federico Commandino 3 Evangelista Torricelli Simon Stevin 4 Luca Valerio 5 Jean Charles de la Faille Paul Guldin 6 John Wallis Christiaan Huygens 7 Louis Carre Pierre Varignon and Alexis Clairaut expanded the concept further 8 Newton s second law is reformulated with respect to the center of mass in Euler s first law 9 Definition EditThe center of mass is the unique point at the center of a distribution of mass in space that has the property that the weighted position vectors relative to this point sum to zero In analogy to statistics the center of mass is the mean location of a distribution of mass in space A system of particles Edit In the case of a system of particles Pi i 1 n each with mass mi that are located in space with coordinates ri i 1 n the coordinates R of the center of mass satisfy the condition i 1 n m i r i R 0 displaystyle sum i 1 n m i mathbf r i mathbf R mathbf 0 Solving this equation for R yields the formulaR 1 M i 1 n m i r i displaystyle mathbf R frac 1 M sum i 1 n m i mathbf r i where M i 1 n m i displaystyle M sum i 1 n m i is the total mass of all of the particles A continuous volume Edit If the mass distribution is continuous with the density r r within a solid Q then the integral of the weighted position coordinates of the points in this volume relative to the center of mass R over the volume V is zero that is Q r r r R d V 0 displaystyle iiint Q rho mathbf r left mathbf r mathbf R right dV 0 Solve this equation for the coordinates R to obtainR 1 M Q r r r d V displaystyle mathbf R frac 1 M iiint Q rho mathbf r mathbf r dV where M is the total mass in the volume If a continuous mass distribution has uniform density which means that r is constant then the center of mass is the same as the centroid of the volume 10 Barycentric coordinates Edit Further information Barycentric coordinate system The coordinates R of the center of mass of a two particle system P1 and P2 with masses m1 and m2 is given byR 1 m 1 m 2 m 1 r 1 m 2 r 2 displaystyle mathbf R frac 1 m 1 m 2 m 1 mathbf r 1 m 2 mathbf r 2 Let the percentage of the total mass divided between these two particles vary from 100 P1 and 0 P2 through 50 P1 and 50 P2 to 0 P1 and 100 P2 then the center of mass R moves along the line from P1 to P2 The percentages of mass at each point can be viewed as projective coordinates of the point R on this line and are termed barycentric coordinates Another way of interpreting the process here is the mechanical balancing of moments about an arbitrary point The numerator gives the total moment that is then balanced by an equivalent total force at the center of mass This can be generalized to three points and four points to define projective coordinates in the plane and in space respectively Systems with periodic boundary conditions Edit For particles in a system with periodic boundary conditions two particles can be neighbours even though they are on opposite sides of the system This occurs often in molecular dynamics simulations for example in which clusters form at random locations and sometimes neighbouring atoms cross the periodic boundary When a cluster straddles the periodic boundary a naive calculation of the center of mass will be incorrect A generalized method for calculating the center of mass for periodic systems is to treat each coordinate x and y and or z as if it were on a circle instead of a line 11 The calculation takes every particle s x coordinate and maps it to an angle 8 i x i x max 2 p displaystyle theta i frac x i x max 2 pi where xmax is the system size in the x direction and x i 0 x max displaystyle x i in 0 x max From this angle two new points 3 i z i displaystyle xi i zeta i can be generated which can be weighted by the mass of the particle x i displaystyle x i for the center of mass or given a value of 1 for the geometric center 3 i cos 8 i z i sin 8 i displaystyle begin aligned xi i amp cos theta i zeta i amp sin theta i end aligned In the 3 z displaystyle xi zeta plane these coordinates lie on a circle of radius 1 From the collection of 3 i displaystyle xi i and z i displaystyle zeta i values from all the particles the averages 3 displaystyle overline xi and z displaystyle overline zeta are calculated 3 1 M i 1 n m i 3 i z 1 M i 1 n m i z i displaystyle begin aligned overline xi amp frac 1 M sum i 1 n m i xi i overline zeta amp frac 1 M sum i 1 n m i zeta i end aligned where M is the sum of the masses of all of the particles These values are mapped back into a new angle 8 displaystyle overline theta from which the x coordinate of the center of mass can be obtained 8 atan2 z 3 p x com x max 8 2 p displaystyle begin aligned overline theta amp operatorname atan2 left overline zeta overline xi right pi x text com amp x max frac overline theta 2 pi end aligned The process can be repeated for all dimensions of the system to determine the complete center of mass The utility of the algorithm is that it allows the mathematics to determine where the best center of mass is instead of guessing or using cluster analysis to unfold a cluster straddling the periodic boundaries If both average values are zero 3 z 0 0 displaystyle left overline xi overline zeta right 0 0 then 8 displaystyle overline theta is undefined This is a correct result because it only occurs when all particles are exactly evenly spaced In that condition their x coordinates are mathematically identical in a periodic system Center of gravity Edit Center of gravity redirects here For other uses see Center of gravity disambiguation Main article Centers of gravity in non uniform fields Diagram of an educational toy that balances on a point the center of mass C settles below its support P A body s center of gravity is the point around which the resultant torque due to gravity forces vanishes Where a gravity field can be considered to be uniform the mass center and the center of gravity will be the same However for satellites in orbit around a planet in the absence of other torques being applied to a satellite the slight variation gradient in gravitational field between closer to stronger and further from weaker the planet can lead to a torque that will tend to align the satellite such that its long axis is vertical In such a case it is important to make the distinction between the center of gravity and the mass center Any horizontal offset between the two will result in an applied torque It is useful to note that the mass center is a fixed property for a given rigid body e g with no slosh or articulation whereas the center of gravity may in addition depend upon its orientation in a non uniform gravitational field In the latter case the center of gravity will always be located somewhat closer to the main attractive body as compared to the mass center and thus will change its position in the body of interest as its orientation is changed In the study of the dynamics of aircraft vehicles and vessels forces and moments need to be resolved relative to the mass center That is true independent of whether gravity itself is a consideration Referring to the mass center as the center of gravity is something of a colloquialism but it is in common usage and when gravity gradient effects are negligible center of gravity and mass center are the same and are used interchangeably In physics the benefits of using the center of mass to model a mass distribution can be seen by considering the resultant of the gravity forces on a continuous body Consider a body Q of volume V with density r r at each point r in the volume In a parallel gravity field the force f at each point r is given by f r d m g k r r d V g k displaystyle mathbf f mathbf r dm g mathbf hat k rho mathbf r dV g mathbf hat k where dm is the mass at the point r g is the acceleration of gravity and k textstyle mathbf hat k is a unit vector defining the vertical direction Choose a reference point R in the volume and compute the resultant force and torque at this point F Q f r d V Q r r d V g k M g k displaystyle mathbf F iiint Q mathbf f mathbf r dV iiint Q rho mathbf r dV left g mathbf hat k right Mg mathbf hat k and T Q r R f r d V Q r R g r r d V k Q r r r R d V g k displaystyle mathbf T iiint Q mathbf r mathbf R times mathbf f mathbf r dV iiint Q mathbf r mathbf R times left g rho mathbf r dV mathbf hat k right left iiint Q rho mathbf r left mathbf r mathbf R right dV right times left g mathbf hat k right If the reference point R is chosen so that it is the center of mass then Q r r r R d V 0 displaystyle iiint Q rho mathbf r left mathbf r mathbf R right dV 0 which means the resultant torque T 0 Because the resultant torque is zero the body will move as though it is a particle with its mass concentrated at the center of mass By selecting the center of gravity as the reference point for a rigid body the gravity forces will not cause the body to rotate which means the weight of the body can be considered to be concentrated at the center of mass Linear and angular momentum EditThe linear and angular momentum of a collection of particles can be simplified by measuring the position and velocity of the particles relative to the center of mass Let the system of particles Pi i 1 n of masses mi be located at the coordinates ri with velocities vi Select a reference point R and compute the relative position and velocity vectors r i r i R R v i d d t r i R v displaystyle mathbf r i mathbf r i mathbf R mathbf R quad mathbf v i frac d dt mathbf r i mathbf R mathbf v The total linear momentum and angular momentum of the system arep d d t i 1 n m i r i R i 1 n m i v displaystyle mathbf p frac d dt left sum i 1 n m i mathbf r i mathbf R right left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf v and L i 1 n m i r i R d d t r i R i 1 n m i R d d t r i R r i R v i 1 n m i R v displaystyle mathbf L sum i 1 n m i mathbf r i mathbf R times frac d dt mathbf r i mathbf R left sum i 1 n m i right left mathbf R times frac d dt mathbf r i mathbf R mathbf r i mathbf R times mathbf v right left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf R times mathbf v If R is chosen as the center of mass these equations simplify top m v L i 1 n m i r i R d d t r i R i 1 n m i R v displaystyle mathbf p m mathbf v quad mathbf L sum i 1 n m i mathbf r i mathbf R times frac d dt mathbf r i mathbf R sum i 1 n m i mathbf R times mathbf v where m is the total mass of all the particles p is the linear momentum and L is the angular momentum The law of conservation of momentum predicts that for any system not subjected to external forces the momentum of the system will remain constant which means the center of mass will move with constant velocity This applies for all systems with classical internal forces including magnetic fields electric fields chemical reactions and so on More formally this is true for any internal forces that cancel in accordance with Newton s Third Law 12 Locating the center of mass EditMain article Locating the center of mass Plumb line method The experimental determination of a body s centre of mass makes use of gravity forces on the body and is based on the fact that the centre of mass is the same as the centre of gravity in the parallel gravity field near the earth s surface The center of mass of a body with an axis of symmetry and constant density must lie on this axis Thus the center of mass of a circular cylinder of constant density has its center of mass on the axis of the cylinder In the same way the center of mass of a spherically symmetric body of constant density is at the center of the sphere In general for any symmetry of a body its center of mass will be a fixed point of that symmetry 13 In two dimensions Edit An experimental method for locating the center of mass is to suspend the object from two locations and to drop plumb lines from the suspension points The intersection of the two lines is the center of mass 14 The shape of an object might already be mathematically determined but it may be too complex to use a known formula In this case one can subdivide the complex shape into simpler more elementary shapes whose centers of mass are easy to find If the total mass and center of mass can be determined for each area then the center of mass of the whole is the weighted average of the centers 15 This method can even work for objects with holes which can be accounted for as negative masses 16 A direct development of the planimeter known as an integraph or integerometer can be used to establish the position of the centroid or center of mass of an irregular two dimensional shape This method can be applied to a shape with an irregular smooth or complex boundary where other methods are too difficult It was regularly used by ship builders to compare with the required displacement and center of buoyancy of a ship and ensure it would not capsize 17 18 In three dimensions Edit An experimental method to locate the three dimensional coordinates of the center of mass begins by supporting the object at three points and measuring the forces F1 F2 and F3 that resist the weight of the object W W k displaystyle mathbf W W mathbf hat k k displaystyle mathbf hat k is the unit vector in the vertical direction Let r1 r2 and r3 be the position coordinates of the support points then the coordinates R of the center of mass satisfy the condition that the resultant torque is zero T r 1 R F 1 r 2 R F 2 r 3 R F 3 0 displaystyle mathbf T mathbf r 1 mathbf R times mathbf F 1 mathbf r 2 mathbf R times mathbf F 2 mathbf r 3 mathbf R times mathbf F 3 0 or R W k r 1 F 1 r 2 F 2 r 3 F 3 displaystyle mathbf R times left W mathbf hat k right mathbf r 1 times mathbf F 1 mathbf r 2 times mathbf F 2 mathbf r 3 times mathbf F 3 This equation yields the coordinates of the center of mass R in the horizontal plane as R 1 W k r 1 F 1 r 2 F 2 r 3 F 3 displaystyle mathbf R frac 1 W mathbf hat k times mathbf r 1 times mathbf F 1 mathbf r 2 times mathbf F 2 mathbf r 3 times mathbf F 3 The center of mass lies on the vertical line L given byL t R t k displaystyle mathbf L t mathbf R t mathbf hat k The three dimensional coordinates of the center of mass are determined by performing this experiment twice with the object positioned so that these forces are measured for two different horizontal planes through the object The center of mass will be the intersection of the two lines L1 and L2 obtained from the two experiments Applications EditEngineering designs Edit Automotive applications Edit Engineers try to design a sports car so that its center of mass is lowered to make the car handle better which is to say maintain traction while executing relatively sharp turns The characteristic low profile of the U S military Humvee was designed in part to allow it to tilt farther than taller vehicles without rolling over by ensuring its low center of mass stays over the space bounded by the four wheels even at angles far from the horizontal Aeronautics Edit Main article Center of gravity of an aircraft The center of mass is an important point on an aircraft which significantly affects the stability of the aircraft To ensure the aircraft is stable enough to be safe to fly the center of mass must fall within specified limits If the center of mass is ahead of the forward limit the aircraft will be less maneuverable possibly to the point of being unable to rotate for takeoff or flare for landing 19 If the center of mass is behind the aft limit the aircraft will be more maneuverable but also less stable and possibly unstable enough so as to be impossible to fly The moment arm of the elevator will also be reduced which makes it more difficult to recover from a stalled condition 20 For helicopters in hover the center of mass is always directly below the rotorhead In forward flight the center of mass will move forward to balance the negative pitch torque produced by applying cyclic control to propel the helicopter forward consequently a cruising helicopter flies nose down in level flight 21 Astronomy Edit Main article Barycenter Two bodies orbiting their barycenter red cross The center of mass plays an important role in astronomy and astrophysics where it is commonly referred to as the barycenter The barycenter is the point between two objects where they balance each other it is the center of mass where two or more celestial bodies orbit each other When a moon orbits a planet or a planet orbits a star both bodies are actually orbiting a point that lies away from the center of the primary larger body 22 For example the Moon does not orbit the exact center of the Earth but a point on a line between the center of the Earth and the Moon approximately 1 710 km 1 062 miles below the surface of the Earth where their respective masses balance This is the point about which the Earth and Moon orbit as they travel around the Sun If the masses are more similar e g Pluto and Charon the barycenter will fall outside both bodies Rigging and safety Edit Knowing the location of the center of gravity when rigging is crucial possibly resulting in severe injury or death if assumed incorrectly A center of gravity that is at or above the lift point will most likely result in a tip over incident In general the further the center of gravity below the pick point the more safe the lift There are other things to consider such as shifting loads strength of the load and mass distance between pick points and number of pick points Specifically when selecting lift points it s very important to place the center of gravity at the center and well below the lift points 23 Body motion Edit Main article KinesiologyIn kinesiology and biomechanics the center of mass is an important parameter that assists people in understanding their human locomotion Typically a human s center of mass is detected with one of two methods the reaction board method is a static analysis that involves the person lying down on that instrument and use of their static equilibrium equation to find their center of mass the segmentation method relies on a mathematical solution based on the physical principle that the summation of the torques of individual body sections relative to a specified axis must equal the torque of the whole system that constitutes the body measured relative to the same axis 24 See also Edit Physics portalBarycenter Buoyancy Center of mass relativistic Center of percussion Center of pressure fluid mechanics Center of pressure terrestrial locomotion Centroid Circumcenter of mass Expected value Mass point geometry Metacentric height Roll center Weight distributionNotes Edit Shore 2008 pp 9 11 Baron 2004 pp 91 94 Baron 2004 pp 94 96 Baron 2004 pp 96 101 Baron 2004 pp 101 106 Mancosu 1999 pp 56 61 Erlichson H 1996 Christiaan Huygens discovery of the center of oscillation formula American Journal of Physics 64 5 571 574 Bibcode 1996AmJPh 64 571E doi 10 1119 1 18156 ISSN 0002 9505 Walton 1855 p 2 Beatty 2006 p 29 Levi 2009 p 85 Bai amp Breen 2008 Kleppner amp Kolenkow 1973 p 117 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol I Ch 19 Center of Mass Moment of Inertia Kleppner amp Kolenkow 1973 pp 119 120 Feynman Leighton amp Sands 1963 pp 19 1 19 2 Hamill 2009 pp 20 21 The theory and design of British shipbuilding Amos Lowrey Ayre p 3 Retrieved 2012 08 20 Sangwin 2006 p 7 Federal Aviation Administration 2007 p 1 4 Federal Aviation Administration 2007 p 1 3 Helicopter Aerodynamics PDF p 82 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 24 Retrieved 2013 11 23 Murray amp Dermott 1999 pp 45 47 Structural Collapse Technician Module 4 Lifting and Rigging PDF FEMA gov Retrieved 2019 11 27 Vint 2003 pp 1 11 References EditAsimov Isaac 1988 1966 Understanding Physics Barnes amp Noble Books ISBN 978 0 88029 251 1 Bai Linge Breen David 2008 Calculating Center of Mass in an Unbounded 2D Environment Journal of Graphics GPU and Game Tools 13 4 53 60 doi 10 1080 2151237X 2008 10129266 S2CID 40807367 Baron Margaret E 2004 1969 The Origins of the Infinitesimal Calculus Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 49544 6 Beatty Millard F 2006 Principles of Engineering Mechanics Volume 2 Dynamics The Analysis of Motion Mathematical Concepts and Methods in Science and Engineering vol 33 Springer ISBN 978 0 387 23704 6 De Silva Clarence W 2002 Vibration and shock handbook CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 1580 0 Federal Aviation Administration 2007 Aircraft Weight and Balance Handbook PDF United States Government Printing Office archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 19 retrieved 2011 10 23 Feynman Richard Leighton Robert B Sands Matthew 1963 The Feynman Lectures on Physics vol 1 Sixth printing February 1977 ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 02010 6 Frautschi Steven C Olenick Richard P Apostol Tom M Goodstein David L 1986 The Mechanical Universe Mechanics and heat advanced edition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 30432 0 Giambattista Alan Richardson Betty McCarthy Richardson Robert Coleman 2007 College physics vol 1 2nd ed McGraw Hill Higher Education ISBN 978 0 07 110608 5 Goldstein Herbert Poole Charles Safko John 2001 Classical Mechanics 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 65702 9 Goldstein Herbert Poole Charles Safko John 2002 Classical Mechanics 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 65702 9 Goodman Lawrence E Warner William H 2001 1964 Statics Dover ISBN 978 0 486 42005 9 Hamill Patrick 2009 Intermediate Dynamics Jones amp Bartlett Learning ISBN 978 0 7637 5728 1 Jong I G Rogers B G 1995 Engineering Mechanics Statics Saunders College Publishing ISBN 978 0 03 026309 5 Kleppner Daniel Kolenkow Robert 1973 An Introduction to Mechanics 2nd ed McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 035048 9 Levi Mark 2009 The Mathematical Mechanic Using Physical Reasoning to Solve Problems Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14020 9 Mancosu Paolo 1999 Philosophy of mathematics and mathematical practice in the seventeenth century Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513244 1 Millikan Robert Andrews 1902 Mechanics molecular physics and heat a twelve weeks college course Chicago Scott Foresman and Company retrieved 2011 05 25 Murray Carl Dermott Stanley 1999 Solar System Dynamics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57295 8 O Donnell Peter J 2015 Essential Dynamics and Relativity CRC Press ISBN 978 1 466 58839 4 Pollard David D Fletcher Raymond C 2005 Fundamentals of Structural Geology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83927 3 Pytel Andrew Kiusalaas Jaan 2010 Engineering Mechanics Statics vol 1 3rd ed Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 495 29559 4 Rosen Joe Gothard Lisa Quinn 2009 Encyclopedia of Physical Science Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 7011 4 Sangwin Christopher J 2006 Locating the centre of mass by mechanical means PDF Journal of the Oughtred Society 15 2 archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 05 retrieved 2011 10 23 Serway Raymond A Jewett John W 2006 Principles of physics a calculus based text vol 1 4th ed Thomson Learning Bibcode 2006ppcb book J ISBN 978 0 534 49143 7 Shirley James H Fairbridge Rhodes Whitmore 1997 Encyclopedia of planetary sciences Springer ISBN 978 0 412 06951 2 Shore Steven N 2008 Forces in Physics A Historical Perspective Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 33303 3 Symon Keith R 1971 Mechanics 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 07392 8 Tipler Paul A Mosca Gene 2004 Physics for Scientists and Engineers vol 1A 5th ed W H Freeman and Company ISBN 978 0 7167 0900 8 Van Pelt Michael 2005 Space Tourism Adventures in Earth Orbit and Beyond Springer ISBN 978 0 387 40213 0 Vint Peter 2003 LAB Center of Mass Center of Gravity of the Human Body PDF KIN 335 Biomechanics retrieved 2013 10 18 Walton William 1855 A collection of problems in illustration of the principles of theoretical mechanics 2nd ed Deighton Bell amp Co External links Edit Look up barycenter in Wiktionary the free dictionary Motion of the Center of Mass shows that the motion of the center of mass of an object in free fall is the same as the motion of a point object The Solar System s barycenter simulations showing the effect each planet contributes to the Solar System s barycenter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Center of mass amp oldid 1141935437 Center of gravity, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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