What's the moment of inertia of a flat disk? Thanks.
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What's the moment of inertia of a flat disk? Thanks.
Is it 1/2 * m * r ^ 2 ?
Oh come on people, don't make this my umteenth thread that never got replys. :(
Well... you answered your own question :)
1/2 m*r^2 is a theoretical value of the moment of inertia
But theres a lot of them that are different formulas. It depends on the geometry of the object.
Well for a cylinder its I = 1/4M*R^2 + 1/3M*L^2
...so for a flat disk I = 1/4M*R^2 makes sense!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacob Roman
I moved it to the math section, since this is a math question, and will probably be better answered there...;)
Tell me if the topic changes to more game related questions, and we will move it back.
ØØ
Hmmm.. Im pretty sure its 1/2, but I could be wrong.Quote:
Well for a cylinder its I = 1/4M*R^2 + 1/3M*L^2
I found this from google.
http://dept.physics.upenn.edu/course...v_05_1999.html
Yeah it's gotta be 1/2
I asked this question to a riend of mine who is a mathematics and physics expert and he replied with this:
Hope that helps you :)Quote:
Originally Posted by mathmate
Cheers,
RyanJ
If it's about its rotation symmetry axis then it's 1/2 Mr2, regardless of how flat it is. Unless by "flat" you mean a 2D disk, i.e. a circle, in which case the calculation can equally be done if you define a "surface density" as Mass/Area, but the physical meaning, if any, must be different. Still the result would be 1/2 Mr2
Is the radius measured in meters, centimeters, or kilometers?
Whichever you prefer, nanometers, parsecs, millimeters, light-years... That depends on the object size. But if for example you want meters for something you can only visualize at the microscope instead of micrometers, then you'd have to use times 10 to the minus 6 or whatever.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacob Roman
Jacob,
Make sure that whichever units you use that you are consistent throughout the rest of your calculations.
Be safe and put all measures of length in meters, all mass into Kilograms, and all time in seconds (mks).
As stated above the moment of inertia you want is 1/2 M r^2 as already stated in one of your previous posts.
http://www.vbforums.com/showthread.p...hlight=inertia
I thought you bought a book?
I did but it didn't have the moment of inertia formulas of different geometric objects.
If you know/learn how to solve simple integrals you'll never have to learn by heart any formulas.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jacob Roman