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Moment (physics)

In physics, a moment is a mathematical expression involving the product of a distance and physical quantity. Moments are usually defined with respect to a fixed reference point and refer to physical quantities located some distance from the reference point. In this way, the moment accounts for the quantity's location or arrangement. For example, the moment of force, often called torque, is the product of a force on an object and the distance from the reference point to the object. In principle, any physical quantity can be multiplied by a distance to produce a moment. Commonly used quantities include forces, masses, and electric charge distributions.

Elaboration edit

In its most basic form, a moment is the product of the distance to a point, raised to a power, and a physical quantity (such as force or electrical charge) at that point:

 

where   is the physical quantity such as a force applied at a point, or a point charge, or a point mass, etc. If the quantity is not concentrated solely at a single point, the moment is the integral of that quantity's density over space:

 

where   is the distribution of the density of charge, mass, or whatever quantity is being considered.

More complex forms take into account the angular relationships between the distance and the physical quantity, but the above equations capture the essential feature of a moment, namely the existence of an underlying   or equivalent term. This implies that there are multiple moments (one for each value of n) and that the moment generally depends on the reference point from which the distance   is measured, although for certain moments (technically, the lowest non-zero moment) this dependence vanishes and the moment becomes independent of the reference point.

Each value of n corresponds to a different moment: the 1st moment corresponds to n = 1; the 2nd moment to n = 2, etc. The 0th moment (n = 0) is sometimes called the monopole moment; the 1st moment (n = 1) is sometimes called the dipole moment, and the 2nd moment (n = 2) is sometimes called the quadrupole moment, especially in the context of electric charge distributions.

Examples edit

  • The moment of force, or torque, is a first moment:  , or, more generally,  .
  • Similarly, angular momentum is the 1st moment of momentum:  . Momentum itself is not a moment.
  • The electric dipole moment is also a 1st moment:   for two opposite point charges or   for a distributed charge with charge density  .

Moments of mass:

  • The total mass is the zeroth moment of mass.
  • The center of mass is the 1st moment of mass normalized by total mass:   for a collection of point masses, or   for an object with mass distribution  .
  • The moment of inertia is the 2nd moment of mass:   for a point mass,   for a collection of point masses, or   for an object with mass distribution  . The center of mass is often (but not always) taken as the reference point.

Multipole moments edit

Assuming a density function that is finite and localized to a particular region, outside that region a 1/r potential may be expressed as a series of spherical harmonics:

 

The coefficients   are known as multipole moments, and take the form:

 

where   expressed in spherical coordinates   is a variable of integration. A more complete treatment may be found in pages describing multipole expansion or spherical multipole moments. (The convention in the above equations was taken from Jackson[1] – the conventions used in the referenced pages may be slightly different.)

When   represents an electric charge density, the   are, in a sense, projections of the moments of electric charge:   is the monopole moment; the   are projections of the dipole moment, the   are projections of the quadrupole moment, etc.

Applications of multipole moments edit

The multipole expansion applies to 1/r scalar potentials, examples of which include the electric potential and the gravitational potential. For these potentials, the expression can be used to approximate the strength of a field produced by a localized distribution of charges (or mass) by calculating the first few moments. For sufficiently large r, a reasonable approximation can be obtained from just the monopole and dipole moments. Higher fidelity can be achieved by calculating higher order moments. Extensions of the technique can be used to calculate interaction energies and intermolecular forces.

The technique can also be used to determine the properties of an unknown distribution  . Measurements pertaining to multipole moments may be taken and used to infer properties of the underlying distribution. This technique applies to small objects such as molecules,[2][3] but has also been applied to the universe itself,[4] being for example the technique employed by the WMAP and Planck experiments to analyze the cosmic microwave background radiation.

History edit

 
A lever in balance

In works believed to stem from Ancient Greece, the concept of a moment is alluded to by the word ῥοπή (rhopḗ, lit. "inclination") and composites like ἰσόρροπα (isorropa, lit. "of equal inclinations").[5][6][7] The context of these works is mechanics and geometry involving the lever.[8] In particular, in extant works attributed to Archimedes, the moment is pointed out in phrasings like:

"Commensurable magnitudes (σύμμετρα μεγέθεα) [A and B] are equally balanced (ἰσορροπέοντι)[a] if their distances [to the center Γ, i.e., ΑΓ and ΓΒ] are inversely proportional (ἀντιπεπονθότως) to their weights (βάρεσιν)."[6][9]

Moreover, in extant texts such as The Method of Mechanical Theorems, moments are used to infer the center of gravity, area, and volume of geometric figures.

In 1269, William of Moerbeke translates various works of Archimedes and Eutocious into Latin. The term ῥοπή is transliterated into ropen.[6]

Around 1450, Jacobus Cremonensis translates ῥοπή in similar texts into the Latin term momentum[citation needed] (lit. "movement"[10]). The same term is kept in a 1501 translation by Giorgio Valla, and subsequently by Francesco Maurolico, Federico Commandino, Guidobaldo del Monte, Adriaan van Roomen, Florence Rivault, Francesco Buonamici, Marin Mersenne[5], and Galileo Galilei. That said, why was the word momentum chosen for the translation? One clue, according to Treccani, is that momento in Medieval Italy, the place the early translators lived, in a transferred sense meant both a "moment of time" and a "moment of weight" (a small amount of weight that turns the scale).[b]

In 1554, Francesco Maurolico clarifies the Latin term momentum in the work Prologi sive sermones. Here is a Latin to English translation as given by Marshall Clagett:[6]

"[...] equal weights at unequal distances do not weigh equally, but unequal weights [at these unequal distances may] weigh equally. For a weight suspended at a greater distance is heavier, as is obvious in a balance. Therefore, there exists a certain third kind of power or third difference of magnitude—one that differs from both body and weight—and this they call moment.[c] Therefore, a body acquires weight from both quantity [i.e., size] and quality [i.e., material], but a weight receives its moment from the distance at which it is suspended. Therefore, when distances are reciprocally proportional to weights, the moments [of the weights] are equal, as Archimedes demonstrated in The Book on Equal Moments.[d] Therefore, weights or [rather] moments like other continuous quantities, are joined at some common terminus, that is, at something common to both of them like the center of weight, or at a point of equilibrium. Now the center of gravity in any weight is that point which, no matter how often or whenever the body is suspended, always inclines perpendicularly toward the universal center.

In addition to body, weight, and moment, there is a certain fourth power, which can be called impetus or force.[e] Aristotle investigates it in On Mechanical Questions, and it is completely different from [the] three aforesaid [powers or magnitudes]. [...]"

in 1586, Simon Stevin uses the Dutch term staltwicht ("parked weight") for momentum in De Beghinselen Der Weeghconst.

In 1632, Galileo Galilei publishes Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems and uses the Italian momento with many meanings, including the one of his predecessors.[11]

In 1643, Thomas Salusbury translates some of Galilei's works into English. Salusbury translates Latin momentum and Italian momento into the English term moment.[f]

In 1765, the Latin term momentum inertiae (English: moment of inertia) is used by Leonhard Euler to refer to one of Christiaan Huygens's quantities in Horologium Oscillatorium.[12] Huygens 1673 work involving finding the center of oscillation had been stimulated by Marin Mersenne, who suggested it to him in 1646.[13][14]

In 1811, the French term moment d'une force (English: moment of force) with respect to a point and plane is used by Siméon Denis Poisson in Traité de mécanique.[15] An English translation appears in 1842.

In 1884, the term torque is suggested by James Thomson in the context of measuring rotational forces of machines (with propellers and rotors).[16][17] Today, a dynamometer is used to measure the torque of machines.

In 1893, Karl Pearson uses the term n-th moment and   in the context of curve-fitting scientific measurements.[18] Pearson wrote in response to John Venn, who, some years earlier, observed a peculiar pattern involving meteorological data and asked for an explanation of its cause.[19] In Pearson's response, this analogy is used: the mechanical "center of gravity" is the mean and the "distance" is the deviation from the mean. This later evolved into moments in mathematics. The analogy between the mechanical concept of a moment and the statistical function involving the sum of the nth powers of deviations was noticed by several earlier, including Laplace, Kramp, Gauss, Encke, Czuber, Quetelet, and De Forest.[20]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ An alternative translation is "have equal moments" as used by Francesco Maurolico in the 1500s.[6] A literal translation is "have equal inclinations".
  2. ^ Treccani writes in its entry on moménto: "[...] alla tradizione medievale, nella quale momentum significava, per lo più, minima porzione di tempo, la più piccola parte dell’ora (precisamente, 1/40 di ora, un minuto e mezzo), ma anche minima quantità di peso, e quindi l’ago della bilancia (basta l’applicazione di un momento di peso perché si rompa l’equilibrio e la bilancia tracolli in un momento);"
  3. ^ In Latin: momentum.
  4. ^ The modern translation of this book is "on the equilibrium of planes". The translation "on equal moments (of planes)" as used by Maurolico is also echoed in his four-volume book called De momentis aequalibus ("about equal moments") where he applies Archimedes' ideas to solid bodies.
  5. ^ In Latin: impetus or vis. This fourth power was the intellectual precursor to the English Latinism momentum, also called quantity of motion.
  6. ^ This is very much in line with other Latin -entum words such as documentum, monumentum, or argumentum which turned into document, monument, and argument in French and English.

References edit

  1. ^ J. D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, 2nd edition, Wiley, New York, (1975). p. 137
  2. ^ Spackman, M. A. (1992). "Molecular electric moments from x-ray diffraction data". Chemical Reviews. 92 (8): 1769–1797. doi:10.1021/cr00016a005.
  3. ^ Dittrich and Jayatilaka, Reliable Measurements of Dipole Moments from Single-Crystal Diffraction Data and Assessment of an In-Crystal Enhancement , Electron Density and Chemical Bonding II, Theoretical Charge Density Studies, Stalke, D. (Ed), 2012, https://www.springer.com/978-3-642-30807-9
  4. ^ Baumann, Daniel (2009). "TASI Lectures on Inflation". arXiv:0907.5424 [hep-th].
  5. ^ a b Mersenne, Marin (1634). Les Méchaniques de Galilée. Paris. pp. 7–8.
  6. ^ a b c d e Clagett, Marshall (1964–84). Archimedes in the Middle Ages (5 vols in 10 tomes). Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1964; Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1967–1984.
  7. ^ ῥοπή. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  8. ^ Clagett, Marshall (1959). The Science of Mechanics in the Middle Ages. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
  9. ^ Dijksterhuis, E. J. (1956). Archimedes. Copenhagen: E. Munksgaard. p. 288.
  10. ^ "moment". Oxford English Dictionary. 1933.
  11. ^ Galluzzi, Paolo (1979). Momento. Studi Galileiani. Rome: Edizioni dell' Ateneo & Bizarri.
  12. ^ Euler, Leonhard (1765). Theoria motus corporum solidorum seu rigidorum: Ex primis nostrae cognitionis principiis stabilita et ad omnes motus, qui in huiusmodi corpora cadere possunt, accommodata [The theory of motion of solid or rigid bodies: established from first principles of our knowledge and appropriate for all motions which can occur in such bodies.] (in Latin). Rostock and Greifswald (Germany): A. F. Röse. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-4297-4281-8. From page 166: "Definitio 7. 422. Momentum inertiae corporis respectu eujuspiam axis est summa omnium productorum, quae oriuntur, si singula corporis elementa per quadrata distantiarum suarum ab axe multiplicentur." (Definition 7. 422. A body's moment of inertia with respect to any axis is the sum of all of the products, which arise, if the individual elements of the body are multiplied by the square of their distances from the axis.)
  13. ^ Huygens, Christiaan (1673). Horologium oscillatorium, sive de Motu pendulorum ad horologia aptato demonstrationes geometricae (in Latin). p. 91.
  14. ^ Huygens, Christiaan (1977–1995). "Center of Oscillation (translation)". Translated by Mahoney, Michael S. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  15. ^ Poisson, Siméon-Denis (1811). Traité de mécanique, tome premier. p. 67.
  16. ^ Thompson, Silvanus Phillips (1893). Dynamo-electric machinery: A Manual For Students Of Electrotechnics (4th ed.). New York, Harvard publishing co. p. 108.
  17. ^ Thomson, James; Larmor, Joseph (1912). Collected Papers in Physics and Engineering. University Press. p. civ.
  18. ^ Pearson, Karl (October 1893). "Asymmetrical Frequency Curves". Nature. 48 (1252): 615–616. Bibcode:1893Natur..48..615P. doi:10.1038/048615a0. S2CID 4057772.
  19. ^ Venn, J. (September 1887). "The Law of Error". Nature. 36 (931): 411–412. Bibcode:1887Natur..36..411V. doi:10.1038/036411c0. S2CID 4098315.
  20. ^ Walker, Helen M. (1929). Studies in the history of statistical method, with special reference to certain educational problems. Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins Co. p. 71.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Moment (physics) at Wikimedia Commons
  • [1] A dictionary definition of moment.

moment, physics, confused, with, momentum, mathematical, concept, moment, mathematics, moment, force, sometimes, shortened, moment, torque, physics, moment, mathematical, expression, involving, product, distance, physical, quantity, moments, usually, defined, . Not to be confused with Momentum For the mathematical concept see Moment mathematics For the moment of a force sometimes shortened to moment see Torque In physics a moment is a mathematical expression involving the product of a distance and physical quantity Moments are usually defined with respect to a fixed reference point and refer to physical quantities located some distance from the reference point In this way the moment accounts for the quantity s location or arrangement For example the moment of force often called torque is the product of a force on an object and the distance from the reference point to the object In principle any physical quantity can be multiplied by a distance to produce a moment Commonly used quantities include forces masses and electric charge distributions Contents 1 Elaboration 1 1 Examples 2 Multipole moments 3 Applications of multipole moments 4 History 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksElaboration editIn its most basic form a moment is the product of the distance to a point raised to a power and a physical quantity such as force or electrical charge at that point m n r n Q displaystyle mu n r n Q nbsp where Q displaystyle Q nbsp is the physical quantity such as a force applied at a point or a point charge or a point mass etc If the quantity is not concentrated solely at a single point the moment is the integral of that quantity s density over space m n r n r r d r displaystyle mu n int r n rho r dr nbsp where r displaystyle rho nbsp is the distribution of the density of charge mass or whatever quantity is being considered More complex forms take into account the angular relationships between the distance and the physical quantity but the above equations capture the essential feature of a moment namely the existence of an underlying r n r r displaystyle r n rho r nbsp or equivalent term This implies that there are multiple moments one for each value of n and that the moment generally depends on the reference point from which the distance r displaystyle r nbsp is measured although for certain moments technically the lowest non zero moment this dependence vanishes and the moment becomes independent of the reference point Each value of n corresponds to a different moment the 1st moment corresponds to n 1 the 2nd moment to n 2 etc The 0th moment n 0 is sometimes called the monopole moment the 1st moment n 1 is sometimes called the dipole moment and the 2nd moment n 2 is sometimes called the quadrupole moment especially in the context of electric charge distributions Examples edit The moment of force or torque is a first moment t r F displaystyle mathbf tau rF nbsp or more generally r F displaystyle mathbf r times mathbf F nbsp Similarly angular momentum is the 1st moment of momentum L r p displaystyle mathbf L mathbf r times mathbf p nbsp Momentum itself is not a moment The electric dipole moment is also a 1st moment p q d displaystyle mathbf p q mathbf d nbsp for two opposite point charges or r r r d 3 r textstyle int mathbf r rho mathbf r d 3 r nbsp for a distributed charge with charge density r r displaystyle rho mathbf r nbsp Moments of mass The total mass is the zeroth moment of mass The center of mass is the 1st moment of mass normalized by total mass R 1 M i r i m i textstyle mathbf R frac 1 M sum i mathbf r i m i nbsp for a collection of point masses or 1 M r r r d 3 r textstyle frac 1 M int mathbf r rho mathbf r d 3 r nbsp for an object with mass distribution r r displaystyle rho mathbf r nbsp The moment of inertia is the 2nd moment of mass I r 2 m displaystyle I r 2 m nbsp for a point mass i r i 2 m i textstyle sum i r i 2 m i nbsp for a collection of point masses or r 2 r r d 3 r textstyle int r 2 rho mathbf r d 3 r nbsp for an object with mass distribution r r displaystyle rho mathbf r nbsp The center of mass is often but not always taken as the reference point Multipole moments editAssuming a density function that is finite and localized to a particular region outside that region a 1 r potential may be expressed as a series of spherical harmonics F r r r r r d 3 r ℓ 0 m ℓ ℓ 4 p 2 ℓ 1 q ℓ m Y ℓ m 8 f r ℓ 1 displaystyle Phi mathbf r int frac rho mathbf r mathbf r mathbf r d 3 r sum ell 0 infty sum m ell ell left frac 4 pi 2 ell 1 right q ell m frac Y ell m theta varphi r ell 1 nbsp The coefficients q ℓ m displaystyle q ell m nbsp are known as multipole moments and take the form q ℓ m r ℓ r r Y ℓ m 8 f d 3 r displaystyle q ell m int r ell rho mathbf r Y ell m theta varphi d 3 r nbsp where r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp expressed in spherical coordinates r f 8 displaystyle left r varphi theta right nbsp is a variable of integration A more complete treatment may be found in pages describing multipole expansion or spherical multipole moments The convention in the above equations was taken from Jackson 1 the conventions used in the referenced pages may be slightly different When r displaystyle rho nbsp represents an electric charge density the q l m displaystyle q lm nbsp are in a sense projections of the moments of electric charge q 00 displaystyle q 00 nbsp is the monopole moment the q 1 m displaystyle q 1m nbsp are projections of the dipole moment the q 2 m displaystyle q 2m nbsp are projections of the quadrupole moment etc Applications of multipole moments editThe multipole expansion applies to 1 r scalar potentials examples of which include the electric potential and the gravitational potential For these potentials the expression can be used to approximate the strength of a field produced by a localized distribution of charges or mass by calculating the first few moments For sufficiently large r a reasonable approximation can be obtained from just the monopole and dipole moments Higher fidelity can be achieved by calculating higher order moments Extensions of the technique can be used to calculate interaction energies and intermolecular forces The technique can also be used to determine the properties of an unknown distribution r displaystyle rho nbsp Measurements pertaining to multipole moments may be taken and used to infer properties of the underlying distribution This technique applies to small objects such as molecules 2 3 but has also been applied to the universe itself 4 being for example the technique employed by the WMAP and Planck experiments to analyze the cosmic microwave background radiation History edit nbsp A lever in balanceIn works believed to stem from Ancient Greece the concept of a moment is alluded to by the word ῥoph rhopḗ lit inclination and composites like ἰsorropa isorropa lit of equal inclinations 5 6 7 The context of these works is mechanics and geometry involving the lever 8 In particular in extant works attributed to Archimedes the moment is pointed out in phrasings like Commensurable magnitudes symmetra mege8ea A and B are equally balanced ἰsorropeonti a if their distances to the center G i e AG and GB are inversely proportional ἀntipepon8otws to their weights baresin 6 9 Moreover in extant texts such as The Method of Mechanical Theorems moments are used to infer the center of gravity area and volume of geometric figures In 1269 William of Moerbeke translates various works of Archimedes and Eutocious into Latin The term ῥoph is transliterated into ropen 6 Around 1450 Jacobus Cremonensis translates ῥoph in similar texts into the Latin term momentum citation needed lit movement 10 The same term is kept in a 1501 translation by Giorgio Valla and subsequently by Francesco Maurolico Federico Commandino Guidobaldo del Monte Adriaan van Roomen Florence Rivault Francesco Buonamici Marin Mersenne 5 and Galileo Galilei That said why was the word momentum chosen for the translation One clue according to Treccani is that momento in Medieval Italy the place the early translators lived in a transferred sense meant both a moment of time and a moment of weight a small amount of weight that turns the scale b In 1554 Francesco Maurolico clarifies the Latin term momentum in the work Prologi sive sermones Here is a Latin to English translation as given by Marshall Clagett 6 equal weights at unequal distances do not weigh equally but unequal weights at these unequal distances may weigh equally For a weight suspended at a greater distance is heavier as is obvious in a balance Therefore there exists a certain third kind of power or third difference of magnitude one that differs from both body and weight and this they call moment c Therefore a body acquires weight from both quantity i e size and quality i e material but a weight receives its moment from the distance at which it is suspended Therefore when distances are reciprocally proportional to weights the moments of the weights are equal as Archimedes demonstrated in The Book on Equal Moments d Therefore weights or rather moments like other continuous quantities are joined at some common terminus that is at something common to both of them like the center of weight or at a point of equilibrium Now the center of gravity in any weight is that point which no matter how often or whenever the body is suspended always inclines perpendicularly toward the universal center In addition to body weight and moment there is a certain fourth power which can be called impetus or force e Aristotle investigates it in On Mechanical Questions and it is completely different from the three aforesaid powers or magnitudes in 1586 Simon Stevin uses the Dutch term staltwicht parked weight for momentum in De Beghinselen Der Weeghconst In 1632 Galileo Galilei publishes Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems and uses the Italian momento with many meanings including the one of his predecessors 11 In 1643 Thomas Salusbury translates some of Galilei s works into English Salusbury translates Latin momentum and Italian momento into the English term moment f In 1765 the Latin term momentum inertiae English moment of inertia is used by Leonhard Euler to refer to one of Christiaan Huygens s quantities in Horologium Oscillatorium 12 Huygens 1673 work involving finding the center of oscillation had been stimulated by Marin Mersenne who suggested it to him in 1646 13 14 In 1811 the French term moment d une force English moment of force with respect to a point and plane is used by Simeon Denis Poisson in Traite de mecanique 15 An English translation appears in 1842 In 1884 the term torque is suggested by James Thomson in the context of measuring rotational forces of machines with propellers and rotors 16 17 Today a dynamometer is used to measure the torque of machines In 1893 Karl Pearson uses the term n th moment and m n displaystyle mu n nbsp in the context of curve fitting scientific measurements 18 Pearson wrote in response to John Venn who some years earlier observed a peculiar pattern involving meteorological data and asked for an explanation of its cause 19 In Pearson s response this analogy is used the mechanical center of gravity is the mean and the distance is the deviation from the mean This later evolved into moments in mathematics The analogy between the mechanical concept of a moment and the statistical function involving the sum of the n th powers of deviations was noticed by several earlier including Laplace Kramp Gauss Encke Czuber Quetelet and De Forest 20 See also editTorque or moment of force see also the article couple mechanics Moment mathematics Mechanical equilibrium applies when an object is balanced so that the sum of the clockwise moments about a pivot is equal to the sum of the anticlockwise moments about the same pivot Moment of inertia I S m r 2 displaystyle left I Sigma mr 2 right nbsp analogous to mass in discussions of rotational motion It is a measure of an object s resistance to changes in its rotation rate Moment of momentum L r m v displaystyle mathbf L mathbf r times m mathbf v nbsp the rotational analog of linear momentum Magnetic moment m I A displaystyle left mathbf mu I mathbf A right nbsp a dipole moment measuring the strength and direction of a magnetic source Electric dipole moment a dipole moment measuring the charge difference and direction between two or more charges For example the electric dipole moment between a charge of q and q separated by a distance of d is p q d displaystyle mathbf p q mathbf d nbsp Bending moment a moment that results in the bending of a structural element First moment of area a property of an object related to its resistance to shear stress Second moment of area a property of an object related to its resistance to bending and deflection Polar moment of inertia a property of an object related to its resistance to torsion Image moments statistical properties of an image Seismic moment quantity used to measure the size of an earthquake Plasma moments fluid description of plasma in terms of density velocity and pressure List of area moments of inertia List of moments of inertia Multipole expansion Spherical multipole momentsNotes edit An alternative translation is have equal moments as used by Francesco Maurolico in the 1500s 6 A literal translation is have equal inclinations Treccani writes in its entry on momento alla tradizione medievale nella quale momentum significava per lo piu minima porzione di tempo la piu piccola parte dell ora precisamente 1 40 di ora un minuto e mezzo ma anche minima quantita di peso e quindi l ago della bilancia basta l applicazione di un momento di peso perche si rompa l equilibrio e la bilancia tracolli in un momento In Latin momentum The modern translation of this book is on the equilibrium of planes The translation on equal moments of planes as used by Maurolico is also echoed in his four volume book called De momentis aequalibus about equal moments where he applies Archimedes ideas to solid bodies In Latin impetus or vis This fourth power was the intellectual precursor to the English Latinism momentum also called quantity of motion This is very much in line with other Latin entum words such as documentum monumentum or argumentum which turned into document monument and argument in French and English References edit J D Jackson Classical Electrodynamics 2nd edition Wiley New York 1975 p 137 Spackman M A 1992 Molecular electric moments from x ray diffraction data Chemical Reviews 92 8 1769 1797 doi 10 1021 cr00016a005 Dittrich and Jayatilaka Reliable Measurements of Dipole Moments from Single Crystal Diffraction Data and Assessment of an In Crystal Enhancement Electron Density and Chemical Bonding II Theoretical Charge Density Studies Stalke D Ed 2012 https www springer com 978 3 642 30807 9 Baumann Daniel 2009 TASI Lectures on Inflation arXiv 0907 5424 hep th a b Mersenne Marin 1634 Les Mechaniques de Galilee Paris pp 7 8 a b c d e Clagett Marshall 1964 84 Archimedes in the Middle Ages 5 vols in 10 tomes Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press 1964 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society 1967 1984 ῥoph Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Clagett Marshall 1959 The Science of Mechanics in the Middle Ages Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press Dijksterhuis E J 1956 Archimedes Copenhagen E Munksgaard p 288 moment Oxford English Dictionary 1933 Galluzzi Paolo 1979 Momento Studi Galileiani Rome Edizioni dell Ateneo amp Bizarri Euler Leonhard 1765 Theoria motus corporum solidorum seu rigidorum Ex primis nostrae cognitionis principiis stabilita et ad omnes motus qui in huiusmodi corpora cadere possunt accommodata The theory of motion of solid or rigid bodies established from first principles of our knowledge and appropriate for all motions which can occur in such bodies in Latin Rostock and Greifswald Germany A F Rose p 166 ISBN 978 1 4297 4281 8 From page 166 Definitio 7 422 Momentum inertiae corporis respectu eujuspiam axis est summa omnium productorum quae oriuntur si singula corporis elementa per quadrata distantiarum suarum ab axe multiplicentur Definition 7 422 A body s moment of inertia with respect to any axis is the sum of all of the products which arise if the individual elements of the body are multiplied by the square of their distances from the axis Huygens Christiaan 1673 Horologium oscillatorium sive de Motu pendulorum ad horologia aptato demonstrationes geometricae in Latin p 91 Huygens Christiaan 1977 1995 Center of Oscillation translation Translated by Mahoney Michael S Retrieved 22 May 2022 Poisson Simeon Denis 1811 Traite de mecanique tome premier p 67 Thompson Silvanus Phillips 1893 Dynamo electric machinery A Manual For Students Of Electrotechnics 4th ed New York Harvard publishing co p 108 Thomson James Larmor Joseph 1912 Collected Papers in Physics and Engineering University Press p civ Pearson Karl October 1893 Asymmetrical Frequency Curves Nature 48 1252 615 616 Bibcode 1893Natur 48 615P doi 10 1038 048615a0 S2CID 4057772 Venn J September 1887 The Law of Error Nature 36 931 411 412 Bibcode 1887Natur 36 411V doi 10 1038 036411c0 S2CID 4098315 Walker Helen M 1929 Studies in the history of statistical method with special reference to certain educational problems Baltimore Williams amp Wilkins Co p 71 External links edit nbsp Look up moment in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Moment physics at Wikimedia Commons 1 A dictionary definition of moment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moment physics amp oldid 1184037284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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