Inertia units for a synchronous machine

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the confusion regarding inertia units for a synchronous machine, specifically the difference between [kg m^2] and [kg m^2 / rad^2]. Participants clarify that while both units can be considered equivalent under certain conditions, the inclusion of [rad^2] may stem from a misunderstanding of angular dimensions. One user suggests checking software documentation for examples to confirm the appropriate use of these units. The conversation highlights the complexities of angular measurements and their dimensionality, indicating that this is a recurring issue in physics discussions. Overall, the thread emphasizes the need for clarity in unit representation in engineering software.
gab_xd
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Are [kg m^2] and [kg m^2 /rad^2] equivalent?
Hello everyone,

I'm sorry if this is not the right sub-forum to post this, but this doubt has been haunting me for a while.

I've got some rotatory machine -let's say, generic synchronous machine-. Turns out there are typical values for [kg m^2] (inertia) in the 2-10 range; the software I'm using asks for inertia values considering [kg m^2 / rad^2] units. Are these equivalent? A quick Google search tells me that they are, but I'm still confused as to why would you blatantly put [rad^2] in there without consequences.

Thanks in advance!
 
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gab_xd said:
why would you blatantly put [rad^2]
Anybody's guess. My guess is narrowmindedness :wink: .

For ##\tau = I\alpha## that would lead to kg m2/rad and for ##E={1\over 2} I\alpha^2 ## you'd get your kg m2/rad2.

You could try to find an example in your software documentation to check that kg m2 is adequate.
(And if you find a counter-example, please post here !)Disclaimer: not an expert, just a physicist -- and the thread remained unanswered for three days, which is atypical for PF :smile:

##\ ##
 
BvU said:
Anybody's guess. My guess is narrowmindedness :wink: .

For ##\tau = I\alpha## that would lead to kg m2/rad and for ##E={1\over 2} I\alpha^2 ## you'd get your kg m2/rad2.

You could try to find an example in your software documentation to check that kg m2 is adequate.
(And if you find a counter-example, please post here !)Disclaimer: not an expert, just a physicist -- and the thread remained unanswered for three days, which is atypical for PF :smile:

##\ ##
Hi BvU,

Thanks for your answer! I thought the question remained unanswered because "it was too basic" :(
During the weekend, I tried getting the units out myself but didn't get to anything conclusive; I will try to find some examples in the software documentation, and will let you know as soon as I can.

I just hope the person that listed the units as ##kg m2## didn't use RPM as his angular frequency unit. :p
 
Part of the problem is that angles are a ratio, and thus have no dimension of their own. That's controversial. The link below is a PF Insights article on that subject. The comment thread on the article is 105 posts long.

https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/can-angles-assigned-dimension/

If an angle has no dimensions, "[kg m^2] and [kg m^2 /rad^2] equivalent" is true.
 
Thanks Anorlunda!

Now that I think about it, it's not the first time I have had problems with angle's dimensions. I'll read that post as soon as I can; took a quick look and it surely looks like a rabbit hole.
 
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