fbpx
Wikipedia

Moment of inertia

The moment of inertia, otherwise known as the mass moment of inertia, angular mass, second moment of mass, or most accurately, rotational inertia, of a rigid body is a quantity that determines the torque needed for a desired angular acceleration about a rotational axis, akin to how mass determines the force needed for a desired acceleration. It depends on the body's mass distribution and the axis chosen, with larger moments requiring more torque to change the body's rate of rotation by a given amount.

Moment of inertia
Flywheels have large moments of inertia to smooth out changes in rates of rotational motion.
Common symbols
I
SI unitkg⋅m2
Other units
lbf·ft·s2
Derivations from
other quantities
DimensionM L2
Tightrope walkers use the moment of inertia of a long rod for balance as they walk the rope. Samuel Dixon crossing the Niagara River in 1890.
To improve their maneuverability combat aircraft are designed to have smaller moments of inertia than civil aircraft

It is an extensive (additive) property: for a point mass the moment of inertia is simply the mass times the square of the perpendicular distance to the axis of rotation. The moment of inertia of a rigid composite system is the sum of the moments of inertia of its component subsystems (all taken about the same axis). Its simplest definition is the second moment of mass with respect to distance from an axis.

For bodies constrained to rotate in a plane, only their moment of inertia about an axis perpendicular to the plane, a scalar value, matters. For bodies free to rotate in three dimensions, their moments can be described by a symmetric 3-by-3 matrix, with a set of mutually perpendicular principal axes for which this matrix is diagonal and torques around the axes act independently of each other.

In mechanical engineering, simply "inertia" is often used to refer to "inertial mass" or "moment of inertia".[1]

Introduction edit

When a body is free to rotate around an axis, torque must be applied to change its angular momentum. The amount of torque needed to cause any given angular acceleration (the rate of change in angular velocity) is proportional to the moment of inertia of the body. Moments of inertia may be expressed in units of kilogram metre squared (kg·m2) in SI units and pound-foot-second squared (lbf·ft·s2) in imperial or US units.

The moment of inertia plays the role in rotational kinetics that mass (inertia) plays in linear kinetics—both characterize the resistance of a body to changes in its motion. The moment of inertia depends on how mass is distributed around an axis of rotation, and will vary depending on the chosen axis. For a point-like mass, the moment of inertia about some axis is given by  , where   is the distance of the point from the axis, and   is the mass. For an extended rigid body, the moment of inertia is just the sum of all the small pieces of mass multiplied by the square of their distances from the axis in rotation. For an extended body of a regular shape and uniform density, this summation sometimes produces a simple expression that depends on the dimensions, shape and total mass of the object.

In 1673, Christiaan Huygens introduced this parameter in his study of the oscillation of a body hanging from a pivot, known as a compound pendulum.[2] The term moment of inertia ("momentum inertiae" in Latin) was introduced by Leonhard Euler in his book Theoria motus corporum solidorum seu rigidorum in 1765,[2][3] and it is incorporated into Euler's second law.

The natural frequency of oscillation of a compound pendulum is obtained from the ratio of the torque imposed by gravity on the mass of the pendulum to the resistance to acceleration defined by the moment of inertia. Comparison of this natural frequency to that of a simple pendulum consisting of a single point of mass provides a mathematical formulation for moment of inertia of an extended body.[4][5]

The moment of inertia also appears in momentum, kinetic energy, and in Newton's laws of motion for a rigid body as a physical parameter that combines its shape and mass. There is an interesting difference in the way moment of inertia appears in planar and spatial movement. Planar movement has a single scalar that defines the moment of inertia, while for spatial movement the same calculations yield a 3 × 3 matrix of moments of inertia, called the inertia matrix or inertia tensor.[6][7]

The moment of inertia of a rotating flywheel is used in a machine to resist variations in applied torque to smooth its rotational output. The moment of inertia of an airplane about its longitudinal, horizontal and vertical axes determine how steering forces on the control surfaces of its wings, elevators and rudder(s) affect the plane's motions in roll, pitch and yaw.

Definition edit

The moment of inertia is defined as the product of mass of section and the square of the distance between the reference axis and the centroid of the section.

 
Spinning figure skaters can reduce their moment of inertia by pulling in their arms, allowing them to spin faster due to conservation of angular momentum.
Video of rotating chair experiment, illustrating moment of inertia. When the spinning professor pulls his arms, his moment of inertia decreases; to conserve angular momentum, his angular velocity increases.

The moment of inertia I is also defined as the ratio of the net angular momentum L of a system to its angular velocity ω around a principal axis,[8][9] that is

 

If the angular momentum of a system is constant, then as the moment of inertia gets smaller, the angular velocity must increase. This occurs when spinning figure skaters pull in their outstretched arms or divers curl their bodies into a tuck position during a dive, to spin faster.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14]

If the shape of the body does not change, then its moment of inertia appears in Newton's law of motion as the ratio of an applied torque τ on a body to the angular acceleration α around a principal axis, that is

 

For a simple pendulum, this definition yields a formula for the moment of inertia I in terms of the mass m of the pendulum and its distance r from the pivot point as,

 

Thus, the moment of inertia of the pendulum depends on both the mass m of a body and its geometry, or shape, as defined by the distance r to the axis of rotation.

This simple formula generalizes to define moment of inertia for an arbitrarily shaped body as the sum of all the elemental point masses dm each multiplied by the square of its perpendicular distance r to an axis k. An arbitrary object's moment of inertia thus depends on the spatial distribution of its mass.

In general, given an object of mass m, an effective radius k can be defined, dependent on a particular axis of rotation, with such a value that its moment of inertia around the axis is

 
where k is known as the radius of gyration around the axis.

Examples edit

Simple pendulum edit

Mathematically, the moment of inertia of a simple pendulum is the ratio of the torque due to gravity about the pivot of a pendulum to its angular acceleration about that pivot point. For a simple pendulum this is found to be the product of the mass of the particle   with the square of its distance   to the pivot, that is

 

This can be shown as follows: The force of gravity on the mass of a simple pendulum generates a torque   around the axis perpendicular to the plane of the pendulum movement. Here   is the distance vector from the torque axis to the pendulum center of mass, and   is the net force on the mass. Associated with this torque is an angular acceleration,  , of the string and mass around this axis. Since the mass is constrained to a circle the tangential acceleration of the mass is  . Since   the torque equation becomes:

 

where   is a unit vector perpendicular to the plane of the pendulum. (The second to last step uses the vector triple product expansion with the perpendicularity of   and  .) The quantity   is the moment of inertia of this single mass around the pivot point.

The quantity   also appears in the angular momentum of a simple pendulum, which is calculated from the velocity   of the pendulum mass around the pivot, where   is the angular velocity of the mass about the pivot point. This angular momentum is given by

 
using a similar derivation to the previous equation.

Similarly, the kinetic energy of the pendulum mass is defined by the velocity of the pendulum around the pivot to yield

 

This shows that the quantity   is how mass combines with the shape of a body to define rotational inertia. The moment of inertia of an arbitrarily shaped body is the sum of the values   for all of the elements of mass in the body.

Compound pendulums edit

 
Pendulums used in Mendenhall gravimeter apparatus, from 1897 scientific journal. The portable gravimeter developed in 1890 by Thomas C. Mendenhall provided the most accurate relative measurements of the local gravitational field of the Earth.

A compound pendulum is a body formed from an assembly of particles of continuous shape that rotates rigidly around a pivot. Its moment of inertia is the sum of the moments of inertia of each of the particles that it is composed of.[15][16]: 395–396 [17]: 51–53  The natural frequency ( ) of a compound pendulum depends on its moment of inertia,  ,

 
where   is the mass of the object,   is local acceleration of gravity, and   is the distance from the pivot point to the center of mass of the object. Measuring this frequency of oscillation over small angular displacements provides an effective way of measuring moment of inertia of a body.[18]: 516–517 

Thus, to determine the moment of inertia of the body, simply suspend it from a convenient pivot point   so that it swings freely in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the desired moment of inertia, then measure its natural frequency or period of oscillation ( ), to obtain

 
where   is the period (duration) of oscillation (usually averaged over multiple periods).

Center of oscillation edit

A simple pendulum that has the same natural frequency as a compound pendulum defines the length   from the pivot to a point called the center of oscillation of the compound pendulum. This point also corresponds to the center of percussion. The length   is determined from the formula,

 
or
 

The seconds pendulum, which provides the "tick" and "tock" of a grandfather clock, takes one second to swing from side-to-side. This is a period of two seconds, or a natural frequency of   for the pendulum. In this case, the distance to the center of oscillation,  , can be computed to be

 

Notice that the distance to the center of oscillation of the seconds pendulum must be adjusted to accommodate different values for the local acceleration of gravity. Kater's pendulum is a compound pendulum that uses this property to measure the local acceleration of gravity, and is called a gravimeter.

Measuring moment of inertia edit

The moment of inertia of a complex system such as a vehicle or airplane around its vertical axis can be measured by suspending the system from three points to form a trifilar pendulum. A trifilar pendulum is a platform supported by three wires designed to oscillate in torsion around its vertical centroidal axis.[19] The period of oscillation of the trifilar pendulum yields the moment of inertia of the system.[20]

Moment of inertia of area edit

Moment of inertia of area is also known as the second moment of area. These calculations are commonly used in civil engineering for structural design of beams and columns. Cross-sectional areas calculated for vertical moment of the x-axis   and horizontal moment of the y-axis  .
Height (h) and breadth (b) are the linear measures, except for circles, which are effectively half-breadth derived,  

Sectional areas moment calculated thus[21] edit

  1. Square:  
  2. Rectangular:   and;  
  3. Triangular:  
  4. Circular:  

Motion in a fixed plane edit

Point mass edit

 
Four objects with identical masses and radii racing down a plane while rolling without slipping.
From back to front:
  •   spherical shell,
  •   solid sphere,
  •   cylindrical ring, and
  •   solid cylinder.
The time for each object to reach the finishing line depends on their moment of inertia. (OGV version)

The moment of inertia about an axis of a body is calculated by summing   for every particle in the body, where   is the perpendicular distance to the specified axis. To see how moment of inertia arises in the study of the movement of an extended body, it is convenient to consider a rigid assembly of point masses. (This equation can be used for axes that are not principal axes provided that it is understood that this does not fully describe the moment of inertia.[22])

Consider the kinetic energy of an assembly of   masses   that lie at the distances   from the pivot point  , which is the nearest point on the axis of rotation. It is the sum of the kinetic energy of the individual masses,[18]: 516–517 [23]: 1084–1085 [23]: 1296–1300 

 

This shows that the moment of inertia of the body is the sum of each of the   terms, that is

 

Thus, moment of inertia is a physical property that combines the mass and distribution of the particles around the rotation axis. Notice that rotation about different axes of the same body yield different moments of inertia.

The moment of inertia of a continuous body rotating about a specified axis is calculated in the same way, except with infinitely many point particles. Thus the limits of summation are removed, and the sum is written as follows:

 

Another expression replaces the summation with an integral,

 

Here, the function   gives the mass density at each point  ,   is a vector perpendicular to the axis of rotation and extending from a point on the rotation axis to a point   in the solid, and the integration is evaluated over the volume   of the body  . The moment of inertia of a flat surface is similar with the mass density being replaced by its areal mass density with the integral evaluated over its area.

Note on second moment of area: The moment of inertia of a body moving in a plane and the second moment of area of a beam's cross-section are often confused. The moment of inertia of a body with the shape of the cross-section is the second moment of this area about the  -axis perpendicular to the cross-section, weighted by its density. This is also called the polar moment of the area, and is the sum of the second moments about the  - and  -axes.[24] The stresses in a beam are calculated using the second moment of the cross-sectional area around either the  -axis or  -axis depending on the load.

Examples edit

 

The moment of inertia of a compound pendulum constructed from a thin disc mounted at the end of a thin rod that oscillates around a pivot at the other end of the rod, begins with the calculation of the moment of inertia of the thin rod and thin disc about their respective centers of mass.[23]

  • The moment of inertia of a thin rod with constant cross-section   and density   and with length   about a perpendicular axis through its center of mass is determined by integration.[23]: 1301  Align the  -axis with the rod and locate the origin its center of mass at the center of the rod, then
     
    where   is the mass of the rod.
  • The moment of inertia of a thin disc of constant thickness  , radius  , and density   about an axis through its center and perpendicular to its face (parallel to its axis of rotational symmetry) is determined by integration.[23]: 1301 [failed verification] Align the  -axis with the axis of the disc and define a volume element as  , then
     
    where   is its mass.
  • The moment of inertia of the compound pendulum is now obtained by adding the moment of inertia of the rod and the disc around the pivot point   as,
     
    where   is the length of the pendulum. Notice that the parallel axis theorem is used to shift the moment of inertia from the center of mass to the pivot point of the pendulum.

A list of moments of inertia formulas for standard body shapes provides a way to obtain the moment of inertia of a complex body as an assembly of simpler shaped bodies. The parallel axis theorem is used to shift the reference point of the individual bodies to the reference point of the assembly.

 

As one more example, consider the moment of inertia of a solid sphere of constant density about an axis through its center of mass. This is determined by summing the moments of inertia of the thin discs that can form the sphere whose centers are along the axis chosen for consideration. If the surface of the ball is defined by the equation[23]: 1301 

 

then the square of the radius   of the disc at the cross-section   along the  -axis is

 

Therefore, the moment of inertia of the ball is the sum of the moments of inertia of the discs along the  -axis,

 
where   is the mass of the sphere.

Rigid body edit

 
The cylinders with higher moment of inertia roll down a slope with a smaller acceleration, as more of their potential energy needs to be converted into the rotational kinetic energy.

If a mechanical system is constrained to move parallel to a fixed plane, then the rotation of a body in the system occurs around an axis   parallel to this plane. In this case, the moment of inertia of the mass in this system is a scalar known as the polar moment of inertia. The definition of the polar moment of inertia can be obtained by considering momentum, kinetic energy and Newton's laws for the planar movement of a rigid system of particles.[15][18][25][26]

If a system of   particles,  , are assembled into a rigid body, then the momentum of the system can be written in terms of positions relative to a reference point  , and absolute velocities  :

 
where   is the angular velocity of the system and   is the velocity of  .

For planar movement the angular velocity vector is directed along the unit vector   which is perpendicular to the plane of movement. Introduce the unit vectors   from the reference point   to a point  , and the unit vector  , so

 

This defines the relative position vector and the velocity vector for the rigid system of the particles moving in a plane.

Note on the cross product: When a body moves parallel to a ground plane, the trajectories of all the points in the body lie in planes parallel to this ground plane. This means that any rotation that the body undergoes must be around an axis perpendicular to this plane. Planar movement is often presented as projected onto this ground plane so that the axis of rotation appears as a point. In this case, the angular velocity and angular acceleration of the body are scalars and the fact that they are vectors along the rotation axis is ignored. This is usually preferred for introductions to the topic. But in the case of moment of inertia, the combination of mass and geometry benefits from the geometric properties of the cross product. For this reason, in this section on planar movement the angular velocity and accelerations of the body are vectors perpendicular to the ground plane, and the cross product operations are the same as used for the study of spatial rigid body movement.

Angular momentum edit

The angular momentum vector for the planar movement of a rigid system of particles is given by[15][18]

 

Use the center of mass   as the reference point so

 

and define the moment of inertia relative to the center of mass   as

 

then the equation for angular momentum simplifies to[23]: 1028 

 

The moment of inertia   about an axis perpendicular to the movement of the rigid system and through the center of mass is known as the polar moment of inertia. Specifically, it is the second moment of mass with respect to the orthogonal distance from an axis (or pole).

For a given amount of angular momentum, a decrease in the moment of inertia results in an increase in the angular velocity. Figure skaters can change their moment of inertia by pulling in their arms. Thus, the angular velocity achieved by a skater with outstretched arms results in a greater angular velocity when the arms are pulled in, because of the reduced moment of inertia. A figure skater is not, however, a rigid body.

Kinetic energy edit

 
This 1906 rotary shear uses the moment of inertia of two flywheels to store kinetic energy which when released is used to cut metal stock (International Library of Technology, 1906).

The kinetic energy of a rigid system of particles moving in the plane is given by[15][18]

 

Let the reference point be the center of mass   of the system so the second term becomes zero, and introduce the moment of inertia   so the kinetic energy is given by[23]: 1084 

 

The moment of inertia   is the polar moment of inertia of the body.

Newton's laws edit

 
A 1920s John Deere tractor with the spoked flywheel on the engine. The large moment of inertia of the flywheel smooths the operation of the tractor.

Newton's laws for a rigid system of   particles,  , can be written in terms of a resultant force and torque at a reference point  , to yield[15][18]

 
where   denotes the trajectory of each particle.

The kinematics of a rigid body yields the formula for the acceleration of the particle   in terms of the position   and acceleration   of the reference particle as well as the angular velocity vector   and angular acceleration vector   of the rigid system of particles as,

 

For systems that are constrained to planar movement, the angular velocity and angular acceleration vectors are directed along   perpendicular to the plane of movement, which simplifies this acceleration equation. In this case, the acceleration vectors can be simplified by introducing the unit vectors   from the reference point   to a point   and the unit vectors  , so

 

This yields the resultant torque on the system as

 

where  , and   is the unit vector perpendicular to the plane for all of the particles  .

Use the center of mass   as the reference point and define the moment of inertia relative to the center of mass  , then the equation for the resultant torque simplifies to[23]: 1029 

 

Motion in space of a rigid body, and the inertia matrix edit

The scalar moments of inertia appear as elements in a matrix when a system of particles is assembled into a rigid body that moves in three-dimensional space. This inertia matrix appears in the calculation of the angular momentum, kinetic energy and resultant torque of the rigid system of particles.[4][5][6][7][27]

Let the system of   particles,   be located at the coordinates   with velocities   relative to a fixed reference frame. For a (possibly moving) reference point  , the relative positions are

 
and the (absolute) velocities are
 
where   is the angular velocity of the system, and   is the velocity of  .

Angular momentum edit

Note that the cross product can be equivalently written as matrix multiplication by combining the first operand and the operator into a skew-symmetric matrix,  , constructed from the components of  :

 

The inertia matrix is constructed by considering the angular momentum, with the reference point   of the body chosen to be the center of mass  :[4][7]

 
where the terms containing   ( ) sum to zero by the definition of center of mass.

Then, the skew-symmetric matrix   obtained from the relative position vector  , can be used to define,

 
where   defined by
 
is the symmetric inertia matrix of the rigid system of particles measured relative to the center of mass  .

Kinetic energy edit

The kinetic energy of a rigid system of particles can be formulated in terms of the center of mass and a matrix of mass moments of inertia of the system. Let the system of   particles   be located at the coordinates   with velocities  , then the kinetic energy is[4][7]

 
where   is the position vector of a particle relative to the center of mass.

This equation expands to yield three terms

 

Since the center of mass is defined by   , the second term in this equation is zero. Introduce the skew-symmetric matrix   so the kinetic energy becomes

 

Thus, the kinetic energy of the rigid system of particles is given by

 
where   is the inertia matrix relative to the center of mass and   is the total mass.

Resultant torque edit

The inertia matrix appears in the application of Newton's second law to a rigid assembly of particles. The resultant torque on this system is,[4][7]

 
where   is the acceleration of the particle  . The kinematics of a rigid body yields the formula for the acceleration of the particle   in terms of the position   and acceleration   of the reference point, as well as the angular velocity vector   and angular acceleration vector   of the rigid system as,
 

Use the center of mass   as the reference point, and introduce the skew-symmetric matrix   to represent the cross product  , to obtain

 

The calculation uses the identity

 
obtained from the Jacobi identity for the triple cross product as shown in the proof below:
Proof
 
In the last statement,   because   is either at rest or moving at a constant velocity but not accelerated, or the origin of the fixed (world) coordinate reference system is placed at the center of mass  . And distributing the cross product over the sum, we get
 

Then, the following Jacobi identity is used on the last term:

 

The result of applying Jacobi identity can then be continued as follows:

moment, inertia, quantity, also, known, area, moment, inertia, second, moment, area, moment, inertia, otherwise, known, mass, moment, inertia, angular, mass, second, moment, mass, most, accurately, rotational, inertia, rigid, body, quantity, that, determines, . For the quantity also known as the area moment of inertia see Second moment of area The moment of inertia otherwise known as the mass moment of inertia angular mass second moment of mass or most accurately rotational inertia of a rigid body is a quantity that determines the torque needed for a desired angular acceleration about a rotational axis akin to how mass determines the force needed for a desired acceleration It depends on the body s mass distribution and the axis chosen with larger moments requiring more torque to change the body s rate of rotation by a given amount Moment of inertiaFlywheels have large moments of inertia to smooth out changes in rates of rotational motion Common symbolsISI unitkg m2Other unitslbf ft s2Derivations fromother quantitiesI L w displaystyle I frac L omega DimensionM L2Tightrope walkers use the moment of inertia of a long rod for balance as they walk the rope Samuel Dixon crossing the Niagara River in 1890 To improve their maneuverability combat aircraft are designed to have smaller moments of inertia than civil aircraft It is an extensive additive property for a point mass the moment of inertia is simply the mass times the square of the perpendicular distance to the axis of rotation The moment of inertia of a rigid composite system is the sum of the moments of inertia of its component subsystems all taken about the same axis Its simplest definition is the second moment of mass with respect to distance from an axis For bodies constrained to rotate in a plane only their moment of inertia about an axis perpendicular to the plane a scalar value matters For bodies free to rotate in three dimensions their moments can be described by a symmetric 3 by 3 matrix with a set of mutually perpendicular principal axes for which this matrix is diagonal and torques around the axes act independently of each other In mechanical engineering simply inertia is often used to refer to inertial mass or moment of inertia 1 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Definition 3 Examples 3 1 Simple pendulum 3 2 Compound pendulums 3 2 1 Center of oscillation 4 Measuring moment of inertia 5 Moment of inertia of area 5 1 Sectional areas moment calculated thus 21 6 Motion in a fixed plane 6 1 Point mass 6 1 1 Examples 6 2 Rigid body 6 2 1 Angular momentum 6 2 2 Kinetic energy 6 2 3 Newton s laws 7 Motion in space of a rigid body and the inertia matrix 7 1 Angular momentum 7 2 Kinetic energy 7 3 Resultant torque 7 4 Parallel axis theorem 7 5 Scalar moment of inertia in a plane 8 Inertia tensor 8 1 Definition 8 2 Alternate inertia convention 8 2 1 Determine inertia convention Principal axes method 8 3 Derivation of the tensor components 8 4 Inertia tensor of translation 8 5 Inertia tensor of rotation 9 Inertia matrix in different reference frames 9 1 Body frame 9 2 Principal axes 9 3 Ellipsoid 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksIntroduction editWhen a body is free to rotate around an axis torque must be applied to change its angular momentum The amount of torque needed to cause any given angular acceleration the rate of change in angular velocity is proportional to the moment of inertia of the body Moments of inertia may be expressed in units of kilogram metre squared kg m2 in SI units and pound foot second squared lbf ft s2 in imperial or US units The moment of inertia plays the role in rotational kinetics that mass inertia plays in linear kinetics both characterize the resistance of a body to changes in its motion The moment of inertia depends on how mass is distributed around an axis of rotation and will vary depending on the chosen axis For a point like mass the moment of inertia about some axis is given by m r 2 displaystyle mr 2 nbsp where r displaystyle r nbsp is the distance of the point from the axis and m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass For an extended rigid body the moment of inertia is just the sum of all the small pieces of mass multiplied by the square of their distances from the axis in rotation For an extended body of a regular shape and uniform density this summation sometimes produces a simple expression that depends on the dimensions shape and total mass of the object In 1673 Christiaan Huygens introduced this parameter in his study of the oscillation of a body hanging from a pivot known as a compound pendulum 2 The term moment of inertia momentum inertiae in Latin was introduced by Leonhard Euler in his book Theoria motus corporum solidorum seu rigidorum in 1765 2 3 and it is incorporated into Euler s second law The natural frequency of oscillation of a compound pendulum is obtained from the ratio of the torque imposed by gravity on the mass of the pendulum to the resistance to acceleration defined by the moment of inertia Comparison of this natural frequency to that of a simple pendulum consisting of a single point of mass provides a mathematical formulation for moment of inertia of an extended body 4 5 The moment of inertia also appears in momentum kinetic energy and in Newton s laws of motion for a rigid body as a physical parameter that combines its shape and mass There is an interesting difference in the way moment of inertia appears in planar and spatial movement Planar movement has a single scalar that defines the moment of inertia while for spatial movement the same calculations yield a 3 3 matrix of moments of inertia called the inertia matrix or inertia tensor 6 7 The moment of inertia of a rotating flywheel is used in a machine to resist variations in applied torque to smooth its rotational output The moment of inertia of an airplane about its longitudinal horizontal and vertical axes determine how steering forces on the control surfaces of its wings elevators and rudder s affect the plane s motions in roll pitch and yaw Definition editThe moment of inertia is defined as the product of mass of section and the square of the distance between the reference axis and the centroid of the section nbsp Spinning figure skaters can reduce their moment of inertia by pulling in their arms allowing them to spin faster due to conservation of angular momentum source source source source source source source source Video of rotating chair experiment illustrating moment of inertia When the spinning professor pulls his arms his moment of inertia decreases to conserve angular momentum his angular velocity increases The moment of inertia I is also defined as the ratio of the net angular momentum L of a system to its angular velocity w around a principal axis 8 9 that isI L w displaystyle I frac L omega nbsp If the angular momentum of a system is constant then as the moment of inertia gets smaller the angular velocity must increase This occurs when spinning figure skaters pull in their outstretched arms or divers curl their bodies into a tuck position during a dive to spin faster 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 If the shape of the body does not change then its moment of inertia appears in Newton s law of motion as the ratio of an applied torque t on a body to the angular acceleration a around a principal axis that ist I a displaystyle tau I alpha nbsp For a simple pendulum this definition yields a formula for the moment of inertia I in terms of the mass m of the pendulum and its distance r from the pivot point as I m r 2 displaystyle I mr 2 nbsp Thus the moment of inertia of the pendulum depends on both the mass m of a body and its geometry or shape as defined by the distance r to the axis of rotation This simple formula generalizes to define moment of inertia for an arbitrarily shaped body as the sum of all the elemental point masses dm each multiplied by the square of its perpendicular distance r to an axis k An arbitrary object s moment of inertia thus depends on the spatial distribution of its mass In general given an object of mass m an effective radius k can be defined dependent on a particular axis of rotation with such a value that its moment of inertia around the axis isI m k 2 displaystyle I mk 2 nbsp where k is known as the radius of gyration around the axis Examples editSee also List of moments of inertia Simple pendulum edit Mathematically the moment of inertia of a simple pendulum is the ratio of the torque due to gravity about the pivot of a pendulum to its angular acceleration about that pivot point For a simple pendulum this is found to be the product of the mass of the particle m displaystyle m nbsp with the square of its distance r displaystyle r nbsp to the pivot that isI m r 2 displaystyle I mr 2 nbsp This can be shown as follows The force of gravity on the mass of a simple pendulum generates a torque t r F displaystyle boldsymbol tau mathbf r times mathbf F nbsp around the axis perpendicular to the plane of the pendulum movement Here r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp is the distance vector from the torque axis to the pendulum center of mass and F displaystyle mathbf F nbsp is the net force on the mass Associated with this torque is an angular acceleration a displaystyle boldsymbol alpha nbsp of the string and mass around this axis Since the mass is constrained to a circle the tangential acceleration of the mass is a a r displaystyle mathbf a boldsymbol alpha times mathbf r nbsp Since F m a displaystyle mathbf F m mathbf a nbsp the torque equation becomes t r F r m a r m r r a r a r m r 2 a I a k displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol tau amp mathbf r times mathbf F mathbf r times m boldsymbol alpha times mathbf r amp m left left mathbf r cdot mathbf r right boldsymbol alpha left mathbf r cdot boldsymbol alpha right mathbf r right amp mr 2 boldsymbol alpha I alpha mathbf hat k end aligned nbsp where k displaystyle mathbf hat k nbsp is a unit vector perpendicular to the plane of the pendulum The second to last step uses the vector triple product expansion with the perpendicularity of a displaystyle boldsymbol alpha nbsp and r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp The quantity I m r 2 displaystyle I mr 2 nbsp is the moment of inertia of this single mass around the pivot point The quantity I m r 2 displaystyle I mr 2 nbsp also appears in the angular momentum of a simple pendulum which is calculated from the velocity v w r displaystyle mathbf v boldsymbol omega times mathbf r nbsp of the pendulum mass around the pivot where w displaystyle boldsymbol omega nbsp is the angular velocity of the mass about the pivot point This angular momentum is given byL r p r m w r m r r w r w r m r 2 w I w k displaystyle begin aligned mathbf L amp mathbf r times mathbf p mathbf r times left m boldsymbol omega times mathbf r right amp m left left mathbf r cdot mathbf r right boldsymbol omega left mathbf r cdot boldsymbol omega right mathbf r right amp mr 2 boldsymbol omega I omega mathbf hat k end aligned nbsp using a similar derivation to the previous equation Similarly the kinetic energy of the pendulum mass is defined by the velocity of the pendulum around the pivot to yieldE K 1 2 m v v 1 2 m r 2 w 2 1 2 I w 2 displaystyle E text K frac 1 2 m mathbf v cdot mathbf v frac 1 2 left mr 2 right omega 2 frac 1 2 I omega 2 nbsp This shows that the quantity I m r 2 displaystyle I mr 2 nbsp is how mass combines with the shape of a body to define rotational inertia The moment of inertia of an arbitrarily shaped body is the sum of the values m r 2 displaystyle mr 2 nbsp for all of the elements of mass in the body Compound pendulums edit nbsp Pendulums used in Mendenhall gravimeter apparatus from 1897 scientific journal The portable gravimeter developed in 1890 by Thomas C Mendenhall provided the most accurate relative measurements of the local gravitational field of the Earth A compound pendulum is a body formed from an assembly of particles of continuous shape that rotates rigidly around a pivot Its moment of inertia is the sum of the moments of inertia of each of the particles that it is composed of 15 16 395 396 17 51 53 The natural frequency w n displaystyle omega text n nbsp of a compound pendulum depends on its moment of inertia I P displaystyle I P nbsp w n m g r I P displaystyle omega text n sqrt frac mgr I P nbsp where m displaystyle m nbsp is the mass of the object g displaystyle g nbsp is local acceleration of gravity and r displaystyle r nbsp is the distance from the pivot point to the center of mass of the object Measuring this frequency of oscillation over small angular displacements provides an effective way of measuring moment of inertia of a body 18 516 517 Thus to determine the moment of inertia of the body simply suspend it from a convenient pivot point P displaystyle P nbsp so that it swings freely in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the desired moment of inertia then measure its natural frequency or period of oscillation t displaystyle t nbsp to obtainI P m g r w n 2 m g r t 2 4 p 2 displaystyle I P frac mgr omega text n 2 frac mgrt 2 4 pi 2 nbsp where t displaystyle t nbsp is the period duration of oscillation usually averaged over multiple periods Center of oscillation edit A simple pendulum that has the same natural frequency as a compound pendulum defines the length L displaystyle L nbsp from the pivot to a point called the center of oscillation of the compound pendulum This point also corresponds to the center of percussion The length L displaystyle L nbsp is determined from the formula w n g L m g r I P displaystyle omega text n sqrt frac g L sqrt frac mgr I P nbsp or L g w n 2 I P m r displaystyle L frac g omega text n 2 frac I P mr nbsp The seconds pendulum which provides the tick and tock of a grandfather clock takes one second to swing from side to side This is a period of two seconds or a natural frequency of p r a d s displaystyle pi mathrm rad s nbsp for the pendulum In this case the distance to the center of oscillation L displaystyle L nbsp can be computed to beL g w n 2 9 81 m s 2 3 14 r a d s 2 0 99 m displaystyle L frac g omega text n 2 approx frac 9 81 mathrm m s 2 3 14 mathrm rad s 2 approx 0 99 mathrm m nbsp Notice that the distance to the center of oscillation of the seconds pendulum must be adjusted to accommodate different values for the local acceleration of gravity Kater s pendulum is a compound pendulum that uses this property to measure the local acceleration of gravity and is called a gravimeter Measuring moment of inertia editThe moment of inertia of a complex system such as a vehicle or airplane around its vertical axis can be measured by suspending the system from three points to form a trifilar pendulum A trifilar pendulum is a platform supported by three wires designed to oscillate in torsion around its vertical centroidal axis 19 The period of oscillation of the trifilar pendulum yields the moment of inertia of the system 20 Moment of inertia of area editMoment of inertia of area is also known as the second moment of area These calculations are commonly used in civil engineering for structural design of beams and columns Cross sectional areas calculated for vertical moment of the x axis I x x displaystyle I xx nbsp and horizontal moment of the y axis I y y displaystyle I yy nbsp Height h and breadth b are the linear measures except for circles which are effectively half breadth derived r displaystyle r nbsp Sectional areas moment calculated thus 21 edit Square I x x I y y b 4 12 displaystyle I xx I yy frac b 4 12 nbsp Rectangular I x x b h 3 12 displaystyle I xx frac bh 3 12 nbsp and I y y h b 3 12 displaystyle I yy frac hb 3 12 nbsp Triangular I x x b h 3 36 displaystyle I xx frac bh 3 36 nbsp Circular I x x I y y 1 4 p r 4 1 64 p d 4 displaystyle I xx I yy frac 1 4 pi r 4 frac 1 64 pi d 4 nbsp Motion in a fixed plane editPoint mass edit nbsp Four objects with identical masses and radii racing down a plane while rolling without slipping From back to front spherical shell solid sphere cylindrical ring and solid cylinder The time for each object to reach the finishing line depends on their moment of inertia OGV version The moment of inertia about an axis of a body is calculated by summing m r 2 displaystyle mr 2 nbsp for every particle in the body where r displaystyle r nbsp is the perpendicular distance to the specified axis To see how moment of inertia arises in the study of the movement of an extended body it is convenient to consider a rigid assembly of point masses This equation can be used for axes that are not principal axes provided that it is understood that this does not fully describe the moment of inertia 22 Consider the kinetic energy of an assembly of N displaystyle N nbsp masses m i displaystyle m i nbsp that lie at the distances r i displaystyle r i nbsp from the pivot point P displaystyle P nbsp which is the nearest point on the axis of rotation It is the sum of the kinetic energy of the individual masses 18 516 517 23 1084 1085 23 1296 1300 E K i 1 N 1 2 m i v i v i i 1 N 1 2 m i w r i 2 1 2 w 2 i 1 N m i r i 2 displaystyle E text K sum i 1 N frac 1 2 m i mathbf v i cdot mathbf v i sum i 1 N frac 1 2 m i left omega r i right 2 frac 1 2 omega 2 sum i 1 N m i r i 2 nbsp This shows that the moment of inertia of the body is the sum of each of the m r 2 displaystyle mr 2 nbsp terms that isI P i 1 N m i r i 2 displaystyle I P sum i 1 N m i r i 2 nbsp Thus moment of inertia is a physical property that combines the mass and distribution of the particles around the rotation axis Notice that rotation about different axes of the same body yield different moments of inertia The moment of inertia of a continuous body rotating about a specified axis is calculated in the same way except with infinitely many point particles Thus the limits of summation are removed and the sum is written as follows I P i m i r i 2 displaystyle I P sum i m i r i 2 nbsp Another expression replaces the summation with an integral I P Q r x y z r 2 d V displaystyle I P iiint Q rho x y z left mathbf r right 2 dV nbsp Here the function r displaystyle rho nbsp gives the mass density at each point x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp r displaystyle mathbf r nbsp is a vector perpendicular to the axis of rotation and extending from a point on the rotation axis to a point x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp in the solid and the integration is evaluated over the volume V displaystyle V nbsp of the body Q displaystyle Q nbsp The moment of inertia of a flat surface is similar with the mass density being replaced by its areal mass density with the integral evaluated over its area Note on second moment of area The moment of inertia of a body moving in a plane and the second moment of area of a beam s cross section are often confused The moment of inertia of a body with the shape of the cross section is the second moment of this area about the z displaystyle z nbsp axis perpendicular to the cross section weighted by its density This is also called the polar moment of the area and is the sum of the second moments about the x displaystyle x nbsp and y displaystyle y nbsp axes 24 The stresses in a beam are calculated using the second moment of the cross sectional area around either the x displaystyle x nbsp axis or y displaystyle y nbsp axis depending on the load Examples edit Main article List of moments of inertia nbsp The moment of inertia of a compound pendulum constructed from a thin disc mounted at the end of a thin rod that oscillates around a pivot at the other end of the rod begins with the calculation of the moment of inertia of the thin rod and thin disc about their respective centers of mass 23 The moment of inertia of a thin rod with constant cross section s displaystyle s nbsp and density r displaystyle rho nbsp and with length ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp about a perpendicular axis through its center of mass is determined by integration 23 1301 Align the x displaystyle x nbsp axis with the rod and locate the origin its center of mass at the center of the rod then I C rod Q r x 2 d V ℓ 2 ℓ 2 r x 2 s d x r s x 3 3 ℓ 2 ℓ 2 r s 3 ℓ 3 8 ℓ 3 8 m ℓ 2 12 displaystyle I C text rod iiint Q rho x 2 dV int frac ell 2 frac ell 2 rho x 2 s dx left rho s frac x 3 3 right frac ell 2 frac ell 2 frac rho s 3 left frac ell 3 8 frac ell 3 8 right frac m ell 2 12 nbsp where m r s ℓ displaystyle m rho s ell nbsp is the mass of the rod The moment of inertia of a thin disc of constant thickness s displaystyle s nbsp radius R displaystyle R nbsp and density r displaystyle rho nbsp about an axis through its center and perpendicular to its face parallel to its axis of rotational symmetry is determined by integration 23 1301 failed verification Align the z displaystyle z nbsp axis with the axis of the disc and define a volume element as d V s r d r d 8 displaystyle dV sr dr d theta nbsp then I C disc Q r r 2 d V 0 2 p 0 R r r 2 s r d r d 8 2 p r s R 4 4 1 2 m R 2 displaystyle I C text disc iiint Q rho r 2 dV int 0 2 pi int 0 R rho r 2 sr dr d theta 2 pi rho s frac R 4 4 frac 1 2 mR 2 nbsp where m p R 2 r s displaystyle m pi R 2 rho s nbsp is its mass The moment of inertia of the compound pendulum is now obtained by adding the moment of inertia of the rod and the disc around the pivot point P displaystyle P nbsp as I P I C rod M rod L 2 2 I C disc M disc L R 2 displaystyle I P I C text rod M text rod left frac L 2 right 2 I C text disc M text disc L R 2 nbsp where L displaystyle L nbsp is the length of the pendulum Notice that the parallel axis theorem is used to shift the moment of inertia from the center of mass to the pivot point of the pendulum A list of moments of inertia formulas for standard body shapes provides a way to obtain the moment of inertia of a complex body as an assembly of simpler shaped bodies The parallel axis theorem is used to shift the reference point of the individual bodies to the reference point of the assembly nbsp As one more example consider the moment of inertia of a solid sphere of constant density about an axis through its center of mass This is determined by summing the moments of inertia of the thin discs that can form the sphere whose centers are along the axis chosen for consideration If the surface of the ball is defined by the equation 23 1301 x 2 y 2 z 2 R 2 displaystyle x 2 y 2 z 2 R 2 nbsp then the square of the radius r displaystyle r nbsp of the disc at the cross section z displaystyle z nbsp along the z displaystyle z nbsp axis isr z 2 x 2 y 2 R 2 z 2 displaystyle r z 2 x 2 y 2 R 2 z 2 nbsp Therefore the moment of inertia of the ball is the sum of the moments of inertia of the discs along the z displaystyle z nbsp axis I C ball R R 1 2 p r r z 4 d z R R 1 2 p r R 2 z 2 2 d z 1 2 p r R 4 z 2 3 R 2 z 3 1 5 z 5 R R p r 1 2 3 1 5 R 5 2 5 m R 2 displaystyle begin aligned I C text ball amp int R R tfrac 1 2 pi rho r z 4 dz int R R tfrac 1 2 pi rho left R 2 z 2 right 2 dz 1ex amp tfrac 1 2 pi rho left R 4 z tfrac 2 3 R 2 z 3 tfrac 1 5 z 5 right R R 1ex amp pi rho left 1 tfrac 2 3 tfrac 1 5 right R 5 1ex amp tfrac 2 5 mR 2 end aligned nbsp where m 4 3 p R 3 r textstyle m frac 4 3 pi R 3 rho nbsp is the mass of the sphere Rigid body edit nbsp The cylinders with higher moment of inertia roll down a slope with a smaller acceleration as more of their potential energy needs to be converted into the rotational kinetic energy If a mechanical system is constrained to move parallel to a fixed plane then the rotation of a body in the system occurs around an axis k displaystyle mathbf hat k nbsp parallel to this plane In this case the moment of inertia of the mass in this system is a scalar known as the polar moment of inertia The definition of the polar moment of inertia can be obtained by considering momentum kinetic energy and Newton s laws for the planar movement of a rigid system of particles 15 18 25 26 If a system of n displaystyle n nbsp particles P i i 1 n displaystyle P i i 1 dots n nbsp are assembled into a rigid body then the momentum of the system can be written in terms of positions relative to a reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp and absolute velocities v i displaystyle mathbf v i nbsp D r i r i R v i w r i R V w D r i V displaystyle begin aligned Delta mathbf r i amp mathbf r i mathbf R mathbf v i amp boldsymbol omega times left mathbf r i mathbf R right mathbf V boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V end aligned nbsp where w displaystyle boldsymbol omega nbsp is the angular velocity of the system and V displaystyle mathbf V nbsp is the velocity of R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp For planar movement the angular velocity vector is directed along the unit vector k displaystyle mathbf k nbsp which is perpendicular to the plane of movement Introduce the unit vectors e i displaystyle mathbf e i nbsp from the reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp to a point r i displaystyle mathbf r i nbsp and the unit vector t i k e i displaystyle mathbf hat t i mathbf hat k times mathbf hat e i nbsp soe i D r i D r i k w w t i k e i v i w D r i V w k D r i e i V w D r i t i V displaystyle begin aligned mathbf hat e i amp frac Delta mathbf r i Delta r i quad mathbf hat k frac boldsymbol omega omega quad mathbf hat t i mathbf hat k times mathbf hat e i mathbf v i amp boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V omega mathbf hat k times Delta r i mathbf hat e i mathbf V omega Delta r i mathbf hat t i mathbf V end aligned nbsp This defines the relative position vector and the velocity vector for the rigid system of the particles moving in a plane Note on the cross product When a body moves parallel to a ground plane the trajectories of all the points in the body lie in planes parallel to this ground plane This means that any rotation that the body undergoes must be around an axis perpendicular to this plane Planar movement is often presented as projected onto this ground plane so that the axis of rotation appears as a point In this case the angular velocity and angular acceleration of the body are scalars and the fact that they are vectors along the rotation axis is ignored This is usually preferred for introductions to the topic But in the case of moment of inertia the combination of mass and geometry benefits from the geometric properties of the cross product For this reason in this section on planar movement the angular velocity and accelerations of the body are vectors perpendicular to the ground plane and the cross product operations are the same as used for the study of spatial rigid body movement Angular momentum edit The angular momentum vector for the planar movement of a rigid system of particles is given by 15 18 L i 1 n m i D r i v i i 1 n m i D r i e i w D r i t i V i 1 n m i D r i 2 w k i 1 n m i D r i e i V displaystyle begin aligned mathbf L amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf v i amp sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat e i times left omega Delta r i mathbf hat t i mathbf V right amp left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i 2 right omega mathbf hat k left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat e i right times mathbf V end aligned nbsp Use the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp as the reference point soD r i e i r i C i 1 n m i D r i e i 0 displaystyle begin aligned Delta r i mathbf hat e i amp mathbf r i mathbf C sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat e i amp 0 end aligned nbsp and define the moment of inertia relative to the center of mass I C displaystyle I mathbf C nbsp asI C i m i D r i 2 displaystyle I mathbf C sum i m i Delta r i 2 nbsp then the equation for angular momentum simplifies to 23 1028 L I C w k displaystyle mathbf L I mathbf C omega mathbf hat k nbsp The moment of inertia I C displaystyle I mathbf C nbsp about an axis perpendicular to the movement of the rigid system and through the center of mass is known as the polar moment of inertia Specifically it is the second moment of mass with respect to the orthogonal distance from an axis or pole For a given amount of angular momentum a decrease in the moment of inertia results in an increase in the angular velocity Figure skaters can change their moment of inertia by pulling in their arms Thus the angular velocity achieved by a skater with outstretched arms results in a greater angular velocity when the arms are pulled in because of the reduced moment of inertia A figure skater is not however a rigid body Kinetic energy edit nbsp This 1906 rotary shear uses the moment of inertia of two flywheels to store kinetic energy which when released is used to cut metal stock International Library of Technology 1906 The kinetic energy of a rigid system of particles moving in the plane is given by 15 18 E K 1 2 i 1 n m i v i v i 1 2 i 1 n m i w D r i t i V w D r i t i V 1 2 w 2 i 1 n m i D r i 2 t i t i w V i 1 n m i D r i t i 1 2 i 1 n m i V V displaystyle begin aligned E text K amp frac 1 2 sum i 1 n m i mathbf v i cdot mathbf v i amp frac 1 2 sum i 1 n m i left omega Delta r i mathbf hat t i mathbf V right cdot left omega Delta r i mathbf hat t i mathbf V right amp frac 1 2 omega 2 left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i 2 mathbf hat t i cdot mathbf hat t i right omega mathbf V cdot left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat t i right frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf V cdot mathbf V end aligned nbsp Let the reference point be the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp of the system so the second term becomes zero and introduce the moment of inertia I C displaystyle I mathbf C nbsp so the kinetic energy is given by 23 1084 E K 1 2 I C w 2 1 2 M V V displaystyle E text K frac 1 2 I mathbf C omega 2 frac 1 2 M mathbf V cdot mathbf V nbsp The moment of inertia I C displaystyle I mathbf C nbsp is the polar moment of inertia of the body Newton s laws edit nbsp A 1920s John Deere tractor with the spoked flywheel on the engine The large moment of inertia of the flywheel smooths the operation of the tractor Newton s laws for a rigid system of n displaystyle n nbsp particles P i i 1 n displaystyle P i i 1 dots n nbsp can be written in terms of a resultant force and torque at a reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp to yield 15 18 F i 1 n m i A i t i 1 n D r i m i A i displaystyle begin aligned mathbf F amp sum i 1 n m i mathbf A i boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n Delta mathbf r i times m i mathbf A i end aligned nbsp where r i displaystyle mathbf r i nbsp denotes the trajectory of each particle The kinematics of a rigid body yields the formula for the acceleration of the particle P i displaystyle P i nbsp in terms of the position R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp and acceleration A displaystyle mathbf A nbsp of the reference particle as well as the angular velocity vector w displaystyle boldsymbol omega nbsp and angular acceleration vector a displaystyle boldsymbol alpha nbsp of the rigid system of particles as A i a D r i w w D r i A displaystyle mathbf A i boldsymbol alpha times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf A nbsp For systems that are constrained to planar movement the angular velocity and angular acceleration vectors are directed along k displaystyle mathbf hat k nbsp perpendicular to the plane of movement which simplifies this acceleration equation In this case the acceleration vectors can be simplified by introducing the unit vectors e i displaystyle mathbf hat e i nbsp from the reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp to a point r i displaystyle mathbf r i nbsp and the unit vectors t i k e i displaystyle mathbf hat t i mathbf hat k times mathbf hat e i nbsp soA i a k D r i e i w k w k D r i e i A a D r i t i w 2 D r i e i A displaystyle begin aligned mathbf A i amp alpha mathbf hat k times Delta r i mathbf hat e i omega mathbf hat k times omega mathbf hat k times Delta r i mathbf hat e i mathbf A amp alpha Delta r i mathbf hat t i omega 2 Delta r i mathbf hat e i mathbf A end aligned nbsp This yields the resultant torque on the system ast i 1 n m i D r i e i a D r i t i w 2 D r i e i A i 1 n m i D r i 2 a k i 1 n m i D r i e i A displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat e i times left alpha Delta r i mathbf hat t i omega 2 Delta r i mathbf hat e i mathbf A right amp left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i 2 right alpha mathbf hat k left sum i 1 n m i Delta r i mathbf hat e i right times mathbf A end aligned nbsp where e i e i 0 displaystyle mathbf hat e i times mathbf hat e i mathbf 0 nbsp and e i t i k displaystyle mathbf hat e i times mathbf hat t i mathbf hat k nbsp is the unit vector perpendicular to the plane for all of the particles P i displaystyle P i nbsp Use the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp as the reference point and define the moment of inertia relative to the center of mass I C displaystyle I mathbf C nbsp then the equation for the resultant torque simplifies to 23 1029 t I C a k displaystyle boldsymbol tau I mathbf C alpha mathbf hat k nbsp Motion in space of a rigid body and the inertia matrix editThe scalar moments of inertia appear as elements in a matrix when a system of particles is assembled into a rigid body that moves in three dimensional space This inertia matrix appears in the calculation of the angular momentum kinetic energy and resultant torque of the rigid system of particles 4 5 6 7 27 For analysis of a spinning top see Precession Classical Newtonian and Euler s equations rigid body dynamics Let the system of n displaystyle n nbsp particles P i i 1 n displaystyle P i i 1 dots n nbsp be located at the coordinates r i displaystyle mathbf r i nbsp with velocities v i displaystyle mathbf v i nbsp relative to a fixed reference frame For a possibly moving reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp the relative positions areD r i r i R displaystyle Delta mathbf r i mathbf r i mathbf R nbsp and the absolute velocities are v i w D r i V R displaystyle mathbf v i boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V mathbf R nbsp where w displaystyle boldsymbol omega nbsp is the angular velocity of the system and V R displaystyle mathbf V R nbsp is the velocity of R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp Angular momentum edit Note that the cross product can be equivalently written as matrix multiplication by combining the first operand and the operator into a skew symmetric matrix b displaystyle left mathbf b right nbsp constructed from the components of b b x b y b z displaystyle mathbf b b x b y b z nbsp b y b y b 0 b z b y b z 0 b x b y b x 0 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf b times mathbf y amp equiv left mathbf b right mathbf y left mathbf b right amp equiv begin bmatrix 0 amp b z amp b y b z amp 0 amp b x b y amp b x amp 0 end bmatrix end aligned nbsp The inertia matrix is constructed by considering the angular momentum with the reference point R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp of the body chosen to be the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp 4 7 L i 1 n m i D r i v i i 1 n m i D r i w D r i V R i 1 n m i D r i D r i w i 1 n m i D r i V R displaystyle begin aligned mathbf L amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf v i amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V mathbf R right amp left sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times left Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega right right left sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf V mathbf R right end aligned nbsp where the terms containing V R displaystyle mathbf V R nbsp C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp sum to zero by the definition of center of mass Then the skew symmetric matrix D r i displaystyle Delta mathbf r i nbsp obtained from the relative position vector D r i r i C displaystyle Delta mathbf r i mathbf r i mathbf C nbsp can be used to define L i 1 n m i D r i 2 w I C w displaystyle mathbf L left sum i 1 n m i left Delta mathbf r i right 2 right boldsymbol omega mathbf I mathbf C boldsymbol omega nbsp where I C displaystyle mathbf I C nbsp defined by I C i 1 n m i D r i 2 displaystyle mathbf I mathbf C sum i 1 n m i left Delta mathbf r i right 2 nbsp is the symmetric inertia matrix of the rigid system of particles measured relative to the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp Kinetic energy edit The kinetic energy of a rigid system of particles can be formulated in terms of the center of mass and a matrix of mass moments of inertia of the system Let the system of n displaystyle n nbsp particles P i i 1 n displaystyle P i i 1 dots n nbsp be located at the coordinates r i displaystyle mathbf r i nbsp with velocities v i displaystyle mathbf v i nbsp then the kinetic energy is 4 7 E K 1 2 i 1 n m i v i v i 1 2 i 1 n m i w D r i V C w D r i V C displaystyle E text K frac 1 2 sum i 1 n m i mathbf v i cdot mathbf v i frac 1 2 sum i 1 n m i left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V mathbf C right cdot left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i mathbf V mathbf C right nbsp where D r i r i C displaystyle Delta mathbf r i mathbf r i mathbf C nbsp is the position vector of a particle relative to the center of mass This equation expands to yield three termsE K 1 2 i 1 n m i w D r i w D r i i 1 n m i V C w D r i 1 2 i 1 n m i V C V C displaystyle E text K frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i right cdot left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i right right left sum i 1 n m i mathbf V mathbf C cdot left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i right right frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i mathbf V mathbf C cdot mathbf V mathbf C right nbsp Since the center of mass is defined by i 1 n m i D r i 0 displaystyle sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i 0 nbsp the second term in this equation is zero Introduce the skew symmetric matrix D r i displaystyle Delta mathbf r i nbsp so the kinetic energy becomesE K 1 2 i 1 n m i D r i w D r i w 1 2 i 1 n m i V C V C 1 2 i 1 n m i w T D r i T D r i w 1 2 i 1 n m i V C V C 1 2 w i 1 n m i D r i 2 w 1 2 i 1 n m i V C V C displaystyle begin aligned E text K amp frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i left left Delta mathbf r i right boldsymbol omega right cdot left left Delta mathbf r i right boldsymbol omega right right frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf V mathbf C cdot mathbf V mathbf C amp frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i left boldsymbol omega mathsf T left Delta mathbf r i right mathsf T left Delta mathbf r i right boldsymbol omega right right frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf V mathbf C cdot mathbf V mathbf C amp frac 1 2 boldsymbol omega cdot left sum i 1 n m i left Delta mathbf r i right 2 right boldsymbol omega frac 1 2 left sum i 1 n m i right mathbf V mathbf C cdot mathbf V mathbf C end aligned nbsp Thus the kinetic energy of the rigid system of particles is given byE K 1 2 w I C w 1 2 M V C 2 displaystyle E text K frac 1 2 boldsymbol omega cdot mathbf I mathbf C boldsymbol omega frac 1 2 M mathbf V mathbf C 2 nbsp where I C displaystyle mathbf I C nbsp is the inertia matrix relative to the center of mass and M displaystyle M nbsp is the total mass Resultant torque edit The inertia matrix appears in the application of Newton s second law to a rigid assembly of particles The resultant torque on this system is 4 7 t i 1 n r i R m i a i displaystyle boldsymbol tau sum i 1 n left mathbf r i mathbf R right times m i mathbf a i nbsp where a i displaystyle mathbf a i nbsp is the acceleration of the particle P i displaystyle P i nbsp The kinematics of a rigid body yields the formula for the acceleration of the particle P i displaystyle P i nbsp in terms of the position R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp and acceleration A R displaystyle mathbf A mathbf R nbsp of the reference point as well as the angular velocity vector w displaystyle boldsymbol omega nbsp and angular acceleration vector a displaystyle boldsymbol alpha nbsp of the rigid system as a i a r i R w w r i R A R displaystyle mathbf a i boldsymbol alpha times left mathbf r i mathbf R right boldsymbol omega times left boldsymbol omega times left mathbf r i mathbf R right right mathbf A mathbf R nbsp Use the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp as the reference point and introduce the skew symmetric matrix D r i r i C displaystyle left Delta mathbf r i right left mathbf r i mathbf C right nbsp to represent the cross product r i C displaystyle mathbf r i mathbf C times nbsp to obtaint i 1 n m i D r i 2 a w i 1 n m i D r i 2 w displaystyle boldsymbol tau left sum i 1 n m i left Delta mathbf r i right 2 right boldsymbol alpha boldsymbol omega times left sum i 1 n m i left Delta mathbf r i right 2 right boldsymbol omega nbsp The calculation uses the identityD r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i 0 displaystyle Delta mathbf r i times left boldsymbol omega times left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i right right boldsymbol omega times left left boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i right times Delta mathbf r i right 0 nbsp obtained from the Jacobi identity for the triple cross product as shown in the proof below Proof t i 1 n r i R m i a i i 1 n D r i m i a i i 1 n m i D r i a i cross product scalar multiplication i 1 n m i D r i a tangential i a centripetal i A R i 1 n m i D r i a tangential i a centripetal i 0 displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n mathbf r i mathbf R times m i mathbf a i amp sum i 1 n Delta mathbf r i times m i mathbf a i amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf a i ldots text cross product scalar multiplication amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf a text tangential i mathbf a text centripetal i mathbf A mathbf R amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf a text tangential i mathbf a text centripetal i 0 end aligned nbsp In the last statement A R 0 displaystyle mathbf A mathbf R 0 nbsp because R displaystyle mathbf R nbsp is either at rest or moving at a constant velocity but not accelerated or the origin of the fixed world coordinate reference system is placed at the center of mass C displaystyle mathbf C nbsp And distributing the cross product over the sum we get t i 1 n m i D r i a tangential i D r i a centripetal i t i 1 n m i D r i a D r i D r i w v tangential i t i 1 n m i D r i a D r i D r i w w D r i displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf a text tangential i Delta mathbf r i times mathbf a text centripetal i boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol alpha times Delta mathbf r i Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times mathbf v text tangential i boldsymbol tau amp sum i 1 n m i Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol alpha times Delta mathbf r i Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i end aligned nbsp Then the following Jacobi identity is used on the last term 0 D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i w D r i D r i w D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i w D r i w D r i cross product anticommutativity D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i w D r i w D r i cross product scalar multiplication D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i 0 self cross product 0 D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i displaystyle begin aligned 0 amp Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega amp Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i ldots text cross product anticommutativity amp Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i ldots text cross product scalar multiplication amp Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i 0 ldots text self cross product 0 amp Delta mathbf r i times boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i boldsymbol omega times boldsymbol omega times Delta mathbf r i times Delta mathbf r i end aligned nbsp The result of applying Jacobi identity can then be continued as follows D r i w w D r i w w D r i D r i, 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.