Average torque of a rotational freefall

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the average torque of a 1m arm with a 1kg mass as it rotates downward due to gravity. The torque is minimal at the top and bottom positions, peaking when the arm is horizontal. Participants suggest graphing the torque as a function of angle to facilitate integration for average torque calculation. The challenge lies in the changing angle between the force vector and the arm vector throughout the motion. Understanding the torque function is essential for finding the average torque in this scenario.
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Hi all, this is not actually homework or similar but the board seemed as the appropriate place for the question.

I have an arm of 1m length pointing upwards from a rotation axis, on the end of the arm is a mass of 1kg, upon release the arm starts rotating downwards due to gravity (no other forces).
What is the average torque produced from the topmost to the bottommost position.

I haven't been doing physics calculations for like 10 years now so am pretty rusty. I can calculate the torque for a force acting in the direction of rotation, but since the force vector and the arm vector angle changes I'm stuck.
 
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Docx said:
Hi all, this is not actually homework or similar but the board seemed as the appropriate place for the question.

I have an arm of 1m length pointing upwards from a rotation axis, on the end of the arm is a mass of 1kg, upon release the arm starts rotating downwards due to gravity (no other forces).
What is the average torque produced from the topmost to the bottommost position.

I haven't been doing physics calculations for like 10 years now so am pretty rusty. I can calculate the torque for a force acting in the direction of rotation, but since the force vector and the arm vector angle changes I'm stuck.

Welcome to the PF.

Well, you have very little torque at the top and bottom of the swing, and maximum torque when the weight and arm are out in the horizontal position (if I understand your problem definition correctly). Can you sketch a graph of the torque as a function of the angle? What does that function look like? Is it a function that is easy to integrate and find the average of?
 
It is normal circular rotation. I am sure it is very simple but i haven't been doing this a long time so i can't even start.
 
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