- 5,917
- 3,110
and a follow-on: I'm taking a very close look at Becker's discussion and derivation of the angular momentum law, and this one is looking to be a very subtle one. I think I may have located the source of the difficulty, but I need to look it over carefully. We have angular momentum ## J=\sum r_i \times m_i \dot{r}_i ##. You @haruspex discovered above (post 45) that this angular momentum is more than just ## I \omega ##, because there are the ## u ## terms as well in the velocity ## \dot{r}_i ##, i.e. ## \dot{r}_i=r_i \dot{\theta}+u ##, where ## \omega=\dot{\theta} ##. I just recognized that also. I think we might find ourselves to now be in agreement with each other, other than perhaps a couple of algebraic errors that we need to correct. Very good. :)
(## u ## is the velocity of the body at the point of attachment. This ## \theta ## of ## \omega= \dot{\theta} ## is not to be confused with the other ## \theta ## of the angle of the string. The two ## \theta ##'s are different.)
and note, with this added ## u ## being the same for each particle, we have ## \sum r_i m_i =0 ## at the center of mass, so these missing terms don't appear in the calculation when done from the center of mass. Hope you agree @haruspex with all of this. Cheers. :)
and note you did have it correct, that your frame of reference is indeed an inertial one. My mistake here. But we do not have ## J=I \omega ## for this case with the reference being the point of attachment, and that seems to be the thing that was our stumbling block.
and note, in the case of a door on a hinge, we do have ## J=I \omega ##, because ## u=0 ##.
additional note: The moment of inertia ## I ## of course needs to be computed from whatever reference point that is used.
and note also that ## \omega ## is the same for a rigid body, whether it is referenced from the center of mass or from some other point.
(## u ## is the velocity of the body at the point of attachment. This ## \theta ## of ## \omega= \dot{\theta} ## is not to be confused with the other ## \theta ## of the angle of the string. The two ## \theta ##'s are different.)
and note, with this added ## u ## being the same for each particle, we have ## \sum r_i m_i =0 ## at the center of mass, so these missing terms don't appear in the calculation when done from the center of mass. Hope you agree @haruspex with all of this. Cheers. :)
and note you did have it correct, that your frame of reference is indeed an inertial one. My mistake here. But we do not have ## J=I \omega ## for this case with the reference being the point of attachment, and that seems to be the thing that was our stumbling block.
and note, in the case of a door on a hinge, we do have ## J=I \omega ##, because ## u=0 ##.
additional note: The moment of inertia ## I ## of course needs to be computed from whatever reference point that is used.
and note also that ## \omega ## is the same for a rigid body, whether it is referenced from the center of mass or from some other point.
Last edited: