Moment of Inertia for 3 masses, on an axis

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the moment of inertia for an L-shaped figure with three masses rotating about a specific axis. Participants clarify that the moment of inertia is calculated using the formula I = ΣMR², where R is the distance from each mass to the axis of rotation. There is confusion regarding the distance of the 1.2 kg mass from the axis, with one participant initially miscalculating it due to using cosine instead of sine. After resolving the calculation issue, they confirm their understanding of the geometry involved. The conversation concludes with the participant expressing gratitude for the assistance received.
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Homework Statement


[refer to picture, thanks]
The "L-shaped" figure rotates on the axis which which intercepts through 9 kilogram and 2.5 kilogram masses. Find the moment of inertia of the object for this type of rotation. Disregard the masses of connecting bars.

Homework Equations


MR^2


The Attempt at a Solution


Not really sure on what to do. I am assuming we treat the objects like point masses but I'm not really sure on that either. Do you take the 1.2 kg object and only use this with its radius to each object? I tried but the answer wasnt in the answer options.

The 2 objects on the axis are confusing me. Where is the center of mass the object is rotating on.

Thanks for any help!
 

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moment of inertia is

I = \sum MR^{2}

where the R is the distance from each mass component to the axis of rotation

if we assume that each mass is a point mass, then they aren't going to be doing any rotating if they are on the axis of rotation

so the problem here is to find the distance from the 1.2 kg mass to the axis of rotation
 
Hi, thanks for the response.

That is what I initially thought, but what I got isn't an answer choice.

I calculated that the 1.2kg mass is 1.788854383m from the axis of rotation.

so 1.2*1.78^2 = 3.84 kg*m^2

This isn't an answer choice
the options are: 50, 19, 11, 0.96, 0.72, 29, 60, 20, 0.60
in kg*m^2
 
The distance that you calculated for the 1.2 kg mass from the axis of rotation is wrong.
 
Okay. I assume you have to use geometry to figure that out.

Tried to use cosine.

Can you tell me how to figure out that distance?
 
Nvm, I figured it out. Was using cosine instead of sine.

Thanks for the help, questions done.

:smile:
 
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