Curl of velocity vector in rotational motion

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SUMMARY

The curl of the velocity vector in rotational motion of a rigid body is definitively equal to twice the angular velocity vector, expressed as ∇×v = 2ω. This holds true even if the angular velocity vector ω(t) varies with time, since the curl operator involves only spatial derivatives and ω is uniform in space for a rigid body. The angular velocity vector cannot depend on spatial coordinates without implying deformation, violating rigidity. The Euler formula v_A = v_B + ω × BA establishes that ω is spatially constant but may be time-dependent. Non-uniform velocity fields with spatially varying angular velocity correspond to deformable media, not rigid bodies.

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  • Vector calculus identities, specifically curl and cross product operations
  • Rigid body kinematics and Euler’s rotation formula
  • Continuum mechanics concepts of velocity fields and deformation
  • Index notation and Levi-Civita symbol for tensor calculus

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  • Study Euler’s rotation theorem and its application to rigid body motion
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  • Learn cylindrical coordinate representations of velocity and angular velocity fields

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Mechanical engineers, physicists, and applied mathematicians analyzing rigid body dynamics, rotational kinematics, and continuum mechanics. This discussion benefits anyone modeling velocity fields in rotating systems or studying the mathematical foundations of angular velocity and curl in fluid and solid mechanics.

brotherbobby
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TL;DR
In rotational motion, ##\boxed{\vec v = \vec\omega\times\vec r}##, irrespective of whether the angular velocity ##\vec\omega## is constant or not (I hope I am correct in saying this). However, the curl of velocity vector, ##\mathbf{\vec\nabla\times\vec v=2\vec\omega}## comes out only to be true if the angular velocity of the rotating body is ##\vec\omega## constant. Is this true? I show the details below.
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Attempt :
I draw the diagram of the problem to the right. A circular plate of radius ##a## rotates with an angular velocity ##\vec\omega = \omega_0\hat k##, assumed constant for the moment. A particle P at rest with the plate lies on the rim along the ##x## axis, as shown. Its velocity is ##\vec v= v\hat j## and its position vector ##\vec r = a\hat i##. Using the right hand rule, these vectors make sense : ##\vec v = \vec\omega_0\times\vec r\Rightarrow v=\omega_0 a##, remembering that ##\hat j = \hat k\times\hat i##. Calculating the curl of this vector using index notation, ##\small{\vec\nabla\times\vec v = \vec\nabla\times(\vec\omega_0\times\vec r)=\epsilon_{ijk}\partial_j(\vec\omega_0\times\vec r)_k\hat e_i = \epsilon_{kij}\epsilon_{klm}\partial_j\,\omega_{0_l}\,x_m \hat e_i=(\delta_{il}\delta_{jm} -\delta_{im}\delta_{jl})\partial_j\,\omega_{0_l}\,x_m \hat e_i}##, which reduces to ##\small={\partial_j\,\omega_{0_i}\,x_j \hat e_i-\partial_j\,\omega_{0_j}\,x_i \hat e_i=3\vec\omega_0-\vec\omega_0=2\omega_0}\Rightarrow \boxed{\vec\nabla\times\vec v=2\vec\omega_0}##, where I have used the fact that ##\vec\omega_0## is uniform and ##\partial_i x_j = \delta_{ij}##. This can also be shown using the method of determinants for the cross product.

Question : Clearly, from my derivation, the angular velocity ##\vec\omega_0## is constant. Does it have to be? In which case, I am mistaken in what I have shown. Can it not be that the curl of the velocity vector at a given time ##t## equals twice the angular velocity at that time : ##\vec\nabla\times\vec v(t)=2\vec\omega(t)##?
 
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brotherbobby said:
However, the curl of velocity vector, ##\mathbf{\vec\nabla\times\vec v=2\vec\omega}## comes out only to be true if the angular velocity of the rotating body is ##\vec\omega## constant. Is this true?
Constant with respect to what? Time or position? If ##\omega## varies with respect to r, then curl is different than when it doesn't. If ##\omega## varies with respect to t, then so will the curl.

See also:
 
brotherbobby said:
Clearly, from my derivation, the angular velocity ω→0 is constant
It is not clear to me. What step breaks if it is not constant wrt time?
 
By definition, ##\vec \omega## is constant is space - or you don’t have rotational motion. The curl does not contain derivatives wrt time so clearly letting ##\vec \omega## have a time dependence does not affect the result here.
 
A.T. said:
Constant with respect to what?
Space.

So if the angular velocity of the body varies with time, say ##\vec\omega(t)##, I have the following two questions. The first one is more basic and I suppose more important :

  1. Can we write ##\vec v(t)=\vec\omega(t)\times\vec r(t)##? Of course the position vector and linear velocity of the point P, viz. ##\vec r(t)\,,\;\vec v(t)## on the body varies with time even if the angular velocity ##\vec\omega## was some constant (##\vec\omega_0##).
  2. Is the curl of the linear velocity twice the angular velocity, i.e. ##\vec\nabla\times\vec v(t)=2\vec\omega(t)##? Given my derivation above, I just don't see how that is.
 
haruspex said:
It is not clear to me. What step breaks if it is not constant wrt time?
Thank you, and a bit silly on my part. My derivation up there in post#1 remains the same even if the the angular velocity vector ##\vec\omega(t)## changed with time. Hence, I suppose it would be ok for us to write that ##\vec\nabla\times\vec v(t)=2\vec\omega(t)##.
 
Orodruin said:
By definition, ##\vec \omega## is constant is space - or you don’t have rotational motion. The curl does not contain derivatives wrt time so clearly letting ##\vec \omega## have a time dependence does not affect the result here.
Yes I agree with the second sentence of yours. It is the first that is more interesting.

Let me write it again, despite being repititive.

The angular velocity vector of a rotating body ##\vec\omega## is necessarily a constant in space. Thus it would be quite nonsense to write ##\vec\omega(\vec r)##.

What if a body was precessing - i.e. the rotating axis changing with time. Can we write its angular velocity ##\vec\omega## to be a function of position ##\vec r## or angle ##\theta##?
 
brotherbobby said:
Yes I agree with the second sentence of yours. It is the first that is more interesting.

Let me write it again, despite being repititive.

The angular velocity vector of a rotating body ##\vec\omega## is necessarily a constant in space. Thus it would be quite nonsense to write ##\vec\omega(\vec r)##.

What if a body was precessing - i.e. the rotating axis changing with time. Can we write its angular velocity ##\vec\omega## to be a function of position ##\vec r## or angle ##\theta##?
No. It is a function of time as it changes with time, but it does not depend on spatial coordinates. If it did the object would necessarily change shape.
 
The angular velocity of a rigid body is defined by the Euler formula:
$$\boldsymbol{v}_A=\boldsymbol v_B+\boldsymbol\omega\times\boldsymbol{BA}.\qquad(*)$$
The vector ##\boldsymbol\omega## can depend on time, but it is independent of any spatial variables. And, indeed, if ##\boldsymbol v## is a velocity field in a rigid body, then ##\boldsymbol \omega=\frac{1}{2}\mathrm{curl}\,\boldsymbol v##. This fact follows directly from (*).
To check it consider ##\boldsymbol{BA}=(x-x_B(t),y-y_B(t),z-z_B(t))## and
##\boldsymbol v(x,y,z)=\boldsymbol v_A##
 
Last edited:
  • #10
In continuum mechanics, one defines the vector field
$$
\boldsymbol{\omega} = \frac{1}{2}\,\nabla \times \mathbf{v}.
$$ It measures the local rotation of a material particle.
In the case of a deformable medium, this vector field may vary in space.
However, a defining property of a rigid (undeformable) body is that the vector field ##\boldsymbol{\omega}## is uniform throughout the body. All particles in a continuous, undeformable medium rotate on their own axis in the same way.
You are free to consider a velocity field of the form
$$
\mathbf{v} = \mathbf{A} \times \mathbf{OM},
$$
with ##\mathbf{A}## a non-uniform vector field. But in that case, this velocity field cannot correspond to that of a rigid body.
For example, in cylindrical coordinates, one could take: ##\mathbf{A} = r\,\mathbf{e}_z,##
which gives :
$$
\mathbf{v} = (r\,\mathbf{e}_z) \times \mathbf{OM} = r^2\,\mathbf{e}_\theta.
$$
As one moves away from the origin, the velocity increases faster than in the rigid-body case.
In this case, if you compute
$$
\boldsymbol{\omega} = \frac{1}{2}\,\nabla \times \mathbf{v},
$$
you will find that ##\boldsymbol{\omega} \neq \mathbf{A}. ##
 

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