Moment of Inertia for a Ball Shell: Calculate & Show w/ Integral

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the moment of inertia for a ball shell, with the correct formula being 2/3mR^2. Participants explain the calculation using integrals and spherical coordinates, emphasizing the use of surface mass density and the area element in spherical coordinates. The integral setup involves expressing the moment of inertia as I = ∫_S r^2 dm, with specific details on the area element da = R^2 sin θ dθ dφ. Clarifications are made regarding the notation for angles in spherical coordinates, with participants sharing resources for visual aids. The conversation highlights the importance of accurate notation and understanding of spherical coordinates in the calculation process.
mick_1
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moment of inertia for a ball shell

Is ther anyone that can explain how to calculate moment of inertia for a ball shell?? I know that the answer is 2/3mR^2, but how can it be showen with integral??
 
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Draw a picture and use spherical coordinates. Set the z-axis as the axis of rotation.

I=\int_S r^2 dm = \int_S (R\sin \theta)^2 \sigma da

where R is the radius of the sphere and \sigma the surface mass density.

Note that da = R^2\sin \theta d\theta d\phi:

I= \sigma R^4 \int_0^{2\pi}\int_0^\pi \sin^3 \theta d\theta d\phi=\frac{8}{3}\pi \sigma R^4=\frac{2}{3}MR^2
 
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What do you mean by dV = R^2\sin \theta d\theta d\phi ??
 
It's an element of volume in spherical coordinates.
 
Yeah, although it should be AREA element: da, I'll change it now...
 
I don't understand this calculation with da = R^2\sin \theta d\theta d\phi
??
Do you have a picture to show this??
 
mick_1 said:
Do you have a picture to show this??

http://www.usd.edu/phys/courses/phys431/notes/sphercoor.gif one I found on a google search. The area element is just the top face of the shaded box.
 
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http://mathworld.wolfram.com/SphericalCoordinates.html

It is shown at eqn 14. Note that the notation for the angle of declination (zenith) and the azimuth are interchanged w.r.t. mine (\phi \leftrightarrow \theta)

EDIT: Ah! Spacetiger has exactly the kind of picture I was looking for.
 

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