jjellybean320
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i need to find the moment of inertia for a cardboard boomerang. what equation could i use?
gneill said:Moment of inertia about what axis? Have you considered an experimental approach? You might find its center of gravity by suspending it from two separate points and see where the vertical plumb lines intersect. You could suspend it from a point as a physical pendulum and time its period,...
jjellybean320 said:can you explain how to find moment of inertia from knowing the center of gravity? I know how to find center of gravity but i don't know how that relates to finding a numerical value for the moment of inertia.
and can you explain how i can get a value of moment of inertia through knowing the period?
thanks
gneill said:
jjellybean320 said:do i hang the boomerang at its center with the 3 blades spanning outward?
also do you know of a mathematical way i could use to check my moment of inertia value?
ideasrule said:Note that if you use the pendulum approach, air resistance will be a big issue for a cardboard boomerang, so you might not get accurate results.
jjellybean320 said:if the moment of inertia = m r^2
could i just find the moment of inertia of each of the 3 blades separately and then multiplying by 3?
so for example if each blade weighed 2 grams and was 15 cm long (i'm rotating around the end of the blade) then the moment of innertia would be (15^2)*2
would that work if i wanted simply an approximate value?
gneill said:Can you provide an image of the boomerang you have in mind so that we might be better able to advise on methodology? Approximate physical dimensions would also be a help.
jjellybean320 said:each blade is approximately 5 inches by 1.25 inches. and it is made from a christmas card.
jjellybean320 said:http://www.livephysics.com/tables-of-physical-data/mechanical/moment-of-inertia.html
the rectangular plate equation on that page is
(1/12)*Mass*(a^2+b^2)
where a and b are the length and width
but this equation is if the axis is through the center.
if the axis is at one end like my boomerang, would i just substitute (1/12) with (1/3)?
gneill said:No. Look up the Parallel Axis Theorem as I suggested. You need to be precise about where the center of rotation is with respect to the center of the plate -- in your case it won't be precisely at the end of the plate, but a bit in from the end. Measure and be sure.
jjellybean320 said:the center of rotation is about 1 cm from the center of the plate. i looked at the wikipedia page for the parallel axis theorem and it was really confusing. I've only taken ap calculus ab.