Hollow Sphere Moment of Inertia Help

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the moment of inertia of a hollow sphere with a mass of 15 kg, an inner radius of 12 cm, and an outer radius of 18 cm, the correct approach involves subtracting the moment of inertia of a solid sphere with the inner radius from that of a solid sphere with the outer radius. The initial calculation using the formula I = 2/3 MR^2 was incorrect, yielding .32 kg m^2 instead of the correct .24 kg m^2. The proper method requires using the formula I = 2/5 MR^2 for both spheres and then subtracting their moments of inertia. Additionally, knowing the density of the material is essential for accurate calculations. This method successfully leads to the correct moment of inertia for the hollow sphere.
George3
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Homework Statement


A hollow sphere has a mass of 15 kg, an inner radius of 12 cm and an outer radius of 18 cm. What is the rotational inertia (moment of inertia) of the sphere about an axis passing through its center?


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I = 2/3 MR^2 for a hollow sphere so i did this:
2/3 (15) (.18^2) = .32 kg m^2

But this is wrong the answer is .24 kg m^2.
Any thoughts?
 
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George3 said:

Homework Statement


A hollow sphere has a mass of 15 kg, an inner radius of 12 cm and an outer radius of 18 cm. What is the rotational inertia (moment of inertia) of the sphere about an axis passing through its center?


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I = 2/3 MR^2 for a hollow sphere so i did this:
2/3 (15) (.18^2) = .32 kg m^2

But this is wrong the answer is .24 kg m^2.
Any thoughts?

Have you tried computing the moment of inertia of a solid sphere of radius 18 cm and subtracting from it the moment of inertia of a solid sphere with a radius of 12 cm? In other words "scooping" out the center of the original sphere to create your object?
 
BUMP... FINAL TOMORROW NEED HELP ON THIS
I really need help on this. And to the previous poster the moment of inertia of a hollow sphere is bigger than that of a solid so your method would not work...right?
 
George3 said:
BUMP... FINAL TOMORROW NEED HELP ON THIS
I really need help on this. And to the previous poster the moment of inertia of a hollow sphere is bigger than that of a solid so your method would not work...right?

Well, I just computed your moment of inertia by doing what I told you to do and got the right answer. Your mistake is confusing a sphere with a spherical portion of the interior removed with a spherical shell.

By the way, you will have to compute the density of the material out of which the object is made.
 
AEM said:
Well, I just computed your moment of inertia by doing what I told you to do and got the right answer. Your mistake is confusing a sphere with a spherical portion of the interior removed with a spherical shell.

By the way, you will have to compute the density of the material out of which the object is made.

So did you take (2/5)MR^2 for both radii and then subtract the two moments of inertia? Which formula for I did you use??
 
Last edited:
George3 said:
So did you take (2/5)MR^2 for both radii and then subtract the two moments of inertia? Which formula for I did you use??

What you do is use I = \frac{2}{5}Mr^2 for each sphere. This is why you need the density of the material. You have to know the mass of the smaller sphere and the mass of the larger sphere. You also have to use the appropriate radius for each. And, yes you subtract the moments of inertia that you compute.
 
I was able to get it thanks for the insight it helped a lot.
 
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