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skiboka33
Dec2-04, 05:57 PM
hi, here's my question...

A pizza has a center of gravity at C, in the middle of the pizza radius = R
A smaller circle of pizza is cut from the pizza of radius R/2 at the left side of the pizza so that one the diameter of the hole where the smaller piece was stretches from the edge of the pizza to the center...

This gives a new center of gravity, C', what is the distance, x, between C' and C...

thanks this question is really givin me headaches....

skiboka33
Dec2-04, 05:59 PM
and let me know if its confusing... (ps, take the word "one" out in "one the diameter", just a typo, lol, thanks again)

Doc Al
Dec2-04, 06:33 PM
Treat the small pizza as a pizza with negative mass. Then find the center of mass of the two "pizzas" taken together: The normal pizza + the small pizza with negative mass.

Pyrrhus
Dec2-04, 07:26 PM
You will also need the \sigma = \frac{mass}{area} trick.

skiboka33
Dec2-04, 08:46 PM
thanks guys i think i got it, didnt know about that negative mass trick!

C' = [(A1)(C) - (A2)(C-R/2) ] / (A1 - A2)

right?

which simplifies to

C' = C + R/6

C' - C = R/6 = Xcm

woot! thanks! :biggrin: