When does an object have kinetic rotational energy?

In summary, rotational energy is a type of kinetic energy that is associated with the rotation of a rigid body about a fixed axis. It can be seen as the sum of the kinetic energy of the individual mass elements of the body or as the rotational kinetic energy about the center of mass. In general, the total kinetic energy of a rigid body is the sum of the kinetic energy of its center of mass and its rotational kinetic energy. However, in some cases, such as when a particle undergoes circular motion about a fixed axis, this can lead to double counting and both approaches are equivalent.
  • #1
Kolika28
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Homework Statement
I'm a bit confussed when it comes to kinetic rotational energy.
Relevant Equations
##K=\frac{1}{2}I\omega^2##
When does an object have rotational energy? Is it only if it rotates around an axis within the object? Does for example a ball attached to a string with a uniform circular movement have rotational kinetic energy?
1591448142965.png
 
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  • #2
It does -- have kinetic energy. You can see it as the usual ##\ {1\over 2} mv^2\ ## and you can also see it as ##\ K=\frac{1}{2}I\omega^2\ ## : $$ I = mr^2,\quad v = \omega r \quad\Rightarrow \quad \ {1\over 2} mv^2\ = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2$$

Small detail: the ball also rotates around a vertcal axis through it center; I ignored that and considered the ball a point mass.
 
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  • #3
So the rotational energy is the same as the kinetic energy in this example? But in several problems, for example when a ball dropps from a height. They wright the equation as this ##mgh= \ {1\over 2} mv^2\ + \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2 ## So I thought they where two different things?
 
  • #4
There are some subtleties here; I'll restrict what I say to just rigid body dynamics. The short answer is that there is really just the total kinetic energy, ##T##. However, sometimes it can be useful to decompose this as the sum of a translational and a rotational part.

A rigid body undergoing pure rotation (i.e. rotating about a fixed axis) is often labelled as having rotational kinetic energy. If the rigid body is rotating at ##\omega## then the magnitude of the velocity of a mass element ##dm## is ##\omega r## and its kinetic energy is ##dT = \frac{1}{2} (dm) v^2 = \frac{1}{2} \omega^2 r^2 dm##. If you integrate this up over all mass elements, you find $$T = \int \frac{1}{2}\omega^2 r^2 dm = \frac{1}{2}\omega^2 \int r^2 dm = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2$$ where ##I## is defined as the moment of inertia about the fixed axis.

But the concept can also be applied to general planar motion of a rigid body, thanks to König's theorem. This states that the kinetic energy of a body equals the kinetic energy of its centre of mass (as if it were a point particle), plus the kinetic energy in the frame of the centre of mass. If ##\vec{R}## is the position vector of the centre of mass and ##\vec{r}_i^{'}## is the position of the ith particle w.r.t. the centre of mass, then ##\vec{r}_i = \vec{R} + \vec{r}_i^{'}##. We then have

$$\begin{align*}
T = \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}}_i^2 &= \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i (\dot{\vec{R}} + \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}})^2 \\
&= \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{R}}^2 + \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}^2 + \dot{\vec{R}} \cdot \sum_i m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}
\end{align*}
$$ Now since ##\sum_i m_i \vec{r}_i^{'} = \vec{0}## (definition of COM), then ##\sum_i m_i \dot{\vec{r}}_i^{'} = \vec{0}##. The expression becomes $$T = \frac{1}{2}M\dot{\vec{R}}^2 + \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}^2 = T_{\text{CM}} + T{\text{w.r.t. CM}}$$ In the case of a rigid body undergoing general planar motion, however, in the frame of the CM the rigid body is undergoing fixed axis rotation about the CM, so the kinetic energy in the frame of the CM is just the rotational kinetic energy about this axis.

So in the most general case, the total kinetic energy of a rigid body ##T = T_{CM} + T_{rot}##, i.e. the sum of the KE of the centre of mass and the rotational KE about its centre of mass, as you have correctly written here:
Kolika28 said:
So the rotational energy is the same as the kinetic energy in this example? But in several problems, for example when a ball dropps from a height. They wright the equation as this ##mgh= \ {1\over 2} mv^2\ + \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2 ## So I thought they where two different things?

So really the two terms are just parts of a decomposition of the total kinetic energy. There are some cases where you must be careful not to double count: for instance, a particle undergoing circular motion about a fixed axis. You can either treat this as pure rotation with ##I = mr^2## and apply ##T = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2##. Or you could use ##\frac{1}{2}mv^2##. Hopefully you can see that these are equivalent expressions.
 
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  • #5
etotheipi said:
There are some subtleties here; I'll restrict what I say to just rigid body dynamics. The short answer is that there is really just the total kinetic energy, ##T##. However, sometimes it can be useful to decompose this as the sum of a translational and a rotational part.

A rigid body undergoing pure rotation (i.e. rotating about a fixed axis) is often labelled as having rotational kinetic energy. If the rigid body is rotating at ##\omega## then the magnitude of the velocity of a mass element ##dm## is ##\omega r## and its kinetic energy is ##dT = \frac{1}{2} (dm) v^2 = \frac{1}{2} \omega^2 r^2 dm##. If you integrate this up over all mass elements, you find $$T = \int \frac{1}{2}\omega^2 r^2 dm = \frac{1}{2}\omega^2 \int r^2 dm = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2$$ where ##I## is defined as the moment of inertia about the fixed axis.

But the concept can also be applied to general planar motion of a rigid body, thanks to König's theorem. This states that the kinetic energy of a body equals the kinetic energy of its centre of mass (as if it were a point particle), plus the kinetic energy in the frame of the centre of mass. If ##\vec{R}## is the position vector of the centre of mass and ##\vec{r}_i^{'}## is the position of the ith particle w.r.t. the centre of mass, then ##\vec{r}_i = \vec{R} + \vec{r}_i^{'}##. We then have

$$\begin{align*}
T = \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}}_i^2 &= \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i (\dot{\vec{R}} + \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}})^2 \\
&= \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{R}}^2 + \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}^2 + \dot{\vec{R}} \cdot \sum_i m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}
\end{align*}
$$ Now since ##\sum_i m_i \vec{r}_i^{'} = \vec{0}## (definition of COM), then ##\sum_i m_i \dot{\vec{r}}_i^{'} = \vec{0}##. The expression becomes $$T = \frac{1}{2}M\dot{\vec{R}}^2 + \sum_i \frac{1}{2}m_i \dot{\vec{r}_i^{'}}^2 = T_{\text{CM}} + T{\text{w.r.t. CM}}$$ In the case of a rigid body undergoing general planar motion, however, in the frame of the CM the rigid body is undergoing fixed axis rotation about the CM, so the kinetic energy in the frame of the CM is just the rotational kinetic energy about this axis.

So in the most general case, the total kinetic energy of a rigid body ##T = T_{CM} + T_{rot}##, i.e. the sum of the KE of the centre of mass and the rotational KE about its centre of mass, as you have correctly written here:So really the two terms are just parts of a decomposition of the total kinetic energy. There are some cases where you must be careful not to double count: for instance, a particle undergoing circular motion about a fixed axis. You can either treat this as pure rotation with ##I = mr^2## and apply ##T = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2##. Or you could use ##\frac{1}{2}mv^2##. Hopefully you can see that these are equivalent expressions.
Ok, I think I understand a bit more now. So for a particle, the equation would then result in a double count. But when do I know if I can treat the object as a particle or a rigid body? Because if it was a rigid body, then I would have to use ##T = T_{CM} + T_{rot}## right? I'm sorry for all the questions, I just really want to understand this!
 
  • #6
Kolika28 said:
Ok, I think I understand a bit more now. So for a particle, the equation would then result in a double count. But when do I know if I can treat the object as a particle or a rigid body? Because if it was a rigid body, then I would have to use ##T = T_{CM} + T_{rot}## right? I'm sorry for all the questions, I just really want to understand this!

Well ##T = T_{CM} + T_{rot}## is only really helpful for extended bodies, since a point particle has zero kinetic energy in the frame of its centre of mass (##T_{rot} = 0##)! It's best to think of ##T_{rot}## as the kinetic energy in the frame of the centre of mass. If you consider a particle to be a rigid body the relation is still just as valid!

You should note that the kinetic energy of a particle is always ##\frac{1}{2}mv^2##. If the particle is rotating about a fixed axis, it's kinetic energy is still ##\frac{1}{2}mv^2##. However ##T = \frac{1}{2}mv^2 = \frac{1}{2}mr^2 \omega^2 = \frac{1}{2} I\omega^2##. You might choose to call this term the rotational kinetic energy. At the end of the day the term rotational kinetic energy is really just a dressed up way of describing the bog standard kinetic energy of a particle or a bunch of particles about an axis; it's not a different quantity, just a term you might get if you decompose the kinetic energy.

I would recommend letting your intuition guide you here. Once you become familiar with the derivations, it should become fairly evident how the kinetic energy can be decomposed into weird and wonderful terms. If ever in doubt, remember that a point particle, tiny mass element etc. always has ##T = \frac{1}{2}mv^2##, and derive from there!
 
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  • #7
You need to define what your system comprises.
If you are talking about the ball+pole then the ball energy would usually be called rotational KE. If just the ball usually it would usually be called translational KE (there are some subtleties here but not for now). As long as the accounting is done correctly in the maths, what it is "called" is neither critical nor always unique.
 
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  • #8
hutchphd said:
You need to define what your system comprises.
If you are talking about the ball+pole then the ball energy would usually be called rotational KE. If just the ball usually it would usually be called translational KE (there are some subtleties here but not for now). As long as the accounting is done correctly in the maths, what it is "called" is neither critical nor always unique.

Agreed, the linguistics muddy the waters. I would much prefer that we didn't have the terminology "rotational kinetic energy", and instead just spoke of the "kinetic energy".

For a point particle undergoing fixed axis rotation you would just have two equivalent expressions for kinetic energy, ##T = \frac{1}{2}mv^2 = \frac{1}{2}I\omega^2##. For general planar motion, you would have kinetic energy of the CM + kinetic energy w.r.t. the CM, ##T = \frac{1}{2}MV^2 + \frac{1}{2}I_{CM}\omega^2##.

I suppose rotational kinetic energy is just the name we give to the expression ##\frac{1}{2}I\omega^2##. Helpful shortcut if you understand it, but potentially misleading if students are led to believe erroneously that it is a different concept!
 
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  • #9
Ok, I think I got it now (or I hope so 😁). Thank you so much for everbody's help. I really appreciate it!
 
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1. What is kinetic rotational energy?

Kinetic rotational energy is the energy an object possesses due to its rotational motion. It is the result of the object's mass, rotational speed, and the distribution of its mass around its axis of rotation.

2. How is kinetic rotational energy different from kinetic energy?

Kinetic energy refers to the energy an object possesses due to its linear motion, while kinetic rotational energy specifically refers to the energy an object possesses due to its rotational motion.

3. When does an object have kinetic rotational energy?

An object has kinetic rotational energy when it is in rotational motion, meaning it is rotating around an axis. This can occur when an external force is applied to the object, causing it to spin, or when the object's center of mass is not at its axis of rotation, causing it to rotate as it moves.

4. How is kinetic rotational energy calculated?

The formula for calculating kinetic rotational energy is E = 1/2 * I * ω2, where E is kinetic rotational energy, I is the moment of inertia of the object, and ω is the angular velocity (rotational speed) of the object.

5. Can kinetic rotational energy be converted into other forms of energy?

Yes, kinetic rotational energy can be converted into other forms of energy, such as thermal energy or potential energy. For example, when a spinning top slows down and eventually stops, its kinetic rotational energy is converted into heat due to friction between the top and the surface it is spinning on.

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