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Rotational and translational kinetic energies and inertia
Rotational Translational
I = j m j r j 2 m
K = 1 2 I ω 2 K = 1 2 m v 2

Moment of inertia of a system of particles

Six small washers are spaced 10 cm apart on a rod of negligible mass and 0.5 m in length. The mass of each washer is 20 g. The rod rotates about an axis located at 25 cm, as shown in [link] . (a) What is the moment of inertia of the system? (b) If the two washers closest to the axis are removed, what is the moment of inertia of the remaining four washers? (c) If the system with six washers rotates at 5 rev/s, what is its rotational kinetic energy?

Figure shows six washers spaced 10 cm apart on a rod rotating about a vertical axis.
Six washers are spaced 10 cm apart on a rod of negligible mass and rotating about a vertical axis.

Strategy

  1. We use the definition for moment of inertia for a system of particles and perform the summation to evaluate this quantity. The masses are all the same so we can pull that quantity in front of the summation symbol.
  2. We do a similar calculation.
  3. We insert the result from (a) into the expression for rotational kinetic energy.

Solution

  1. I = j m j r j 2 = ( 0.02 kg ) ( 2 × ( 0.25 m ) 2 + 2 × ( 0.15 m ) 2 + 2 × ( 0.05 m ) 2 ) = 0.0035 kg · m 2 .
  2. I = j m j r j 2 = ( 0.02 kg ) ( 2 × ( 0.25 m ) 2 + 2 × ( 0.15 m ) 2 ) = 0.0034 kg · m 2 .
  3. K = 1 2 I ω 2 = 1 2 ( 0.0035 kg · m 2 ) ( 5.0 × 2 π rad / s ) 2 = 1.73 J .

Significance

We can see the individual contributions to the moment of inertia. The masses close to the axis of rotation have a very small contribution. When we removed them, it had a very small effect on the moment of inertia.

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In the next section, we generalize the summation equation for point particles and develop a method to calculate moments of inertia for rigid bodies. For now, though, [link] gives values of rotational inertia for common object shapes around specified axes.

Figure shows ten rotating objects. These are hoop rotating about cylinder axis, solid cylinder or disk rotating about cylinder axis, thin rod rotating about axis through center solid sphere rotating about diameter, hoop rotating about diameter, annular cylinder rotating about cylinder axis, solid cylinder or disk rotating about central diameter, thin road rotating about the axis through one end perpendicular to the length, thin spherical shell about any diameter, slab about perpendicular axis through center.
Values of rotational inertia for common shapes of objects.

Applying rotational kinetic energy

Now let’s apply the ideas of rotational kinetic energy and the moment of inertia table to get a feeling for the energy associated with a few rotating objects. The following examples will also help get you comfortable using these equations. First, let’s look at a general problem-solving strategy for rotational energy.

Problem-solving strategy: rotational energy

  1. Determine that energy or work is involved in the rotation.
  2. Determine the system of interest. A sketch usually helps.
  3. Analyze the situation to determine the types of work and energy involved.
  4. If there are no losses of energy due to friction and other nonconservative forces, mechanical energy is conserved, that is, K i + U i = K f + U f .
  5. If nonconservative forces are present, mechanical energy is not conserved, and other forms of energy, such as heat and light, may enter or leave the system. Determine what they are and calculate them as necessary.
  6. Eliminate terms wherever possible to simplify the algebra.
  7. Evaluate the numerical solution to see if it makes sense in the physical situation presented in the wording of the problem.

Calculating helicopter energies

A typical small rescue helicopter has four blades: Each is 4.00 m long and has a mass of 50.0 kg ( [link] ). The blades can be approximated as thin rods that rotate about one end of an axis perpendicular to their length. The helicopter has a total loaded mass of 1000 kg. (a) Calculate the rotational kinetic energy in the blades when they rotate at 300 rpm. (b) Calculate the translational kinetic energy of the helicopter when it flies at 20.0 m/s, and compare it with the rotational energy in the blades.

Figure A is a sketch of a four-blade helicopter with 4.0 meter blades spinning counterclockwise. Figure B is a photo of a water rescue operation featuring a helicopter.
(a) Sketch of a four-blade helicopter. (b) A water rescue operation featuring a helicopter from the Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopter Service. (credit b: “111 Emergency”/Flickr)

Strategy

Rotational and translational kinetic energies can be calculated from their definitions. The wording of the problem gives all the necessary constants to evaluate the expressions for the rotational and translational kinetic energies.

Solution

  1. The rotational kinetic energy is
    K = 1 2 I ω 2 .

    We must convert the angular velocity to radians per second and calculate the moment of inertia before we can find K . The angular velocity ω is
    ω = 300 rev 1.00 min 2 π rad 1 rev 1.00 min 60.0 s = 31.4 rad s .

    The moment of inertia of one blade is that of a thin rod rotated about its end, listed in [link] . The total I is four times this moment of inertia because there are four blades. Thus,
    I = 4 M l 2 3 = 4 × ( 50.0 kg ) ( 4.00 m ) 2 3 = 1067.0 kg · m 2 .

    Entering ω and I into the expression for rotational kinetic energy gives
    K = 0.5 ( 1067 kg · m 2 ) (31.4 rad/s) 2 = 5.26 × 10 5 J .
  2. Entering the given values into the equation for translational kinetic energy, we obtain
    K = 1 2 m v 2 = ( 0.5 ) ( 1000.0 kg ) ( 20.0 m/s ) 2 = 2.00 × 10 5 J .

    To compare kinetic energies, we take the ratio of translational kinetic energy to rotational kinetic energy. This ratio is
    2.00 × 10 5 J 5.26 × 10 5 J = 0.380 .

Significance

The ratio of translational energy to rotational kinetic energy is only 0.380. This ratio tells us that most of the kinetic energy of the helicopter is in its spinning blades.

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Sep 19, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12031/1.5
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