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2.1: Definition of Moment of Inertia

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    6932
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    Consider a straight line (the "axis") and a set of point masses \( m_{1}, m_{2}, m_{3} \) ... such that the distance of the mass \(m_{i}\) from the axis is \( r_{i} \). The quantity \( m_{i} r_{i}^{2} \) is the second moment of the \( i \) th mass with respect to (or "about") the axis, and the sum \( \sum m_{i} r_{i}^{2} \) is the second moment of mass of all the masses with respect to the axis.

    Apart from some subtleties encountered in general relativity, the word "inertia" is synonymous with mass - the inertia of a body is merely the ratio of an applied force to the resulting acceleration. Thus \( \sum m_{i} r_{i}^{2} \) can also be called the second moment of inertia. The second moment of inertia is discussed so much in mechanics that it is usually referred to as just "the" moment of inertia.

    In this chapter we shall consider how to calculate the (second) moment of inertia for different sizes and shapes of body, as well as certain associated theorems. But the question should be asked: "What is the purpose of calculating the squares of the distances of lots of particles from an axis, multiplying these squares by the mass of each, and adding them all together? Is this merely a pointless make-work exercise in arithmetic? Might one just as well, for all the good it does, calculate the sum \( \sum m_{i} r_{i}^{2} \)? Does \( \sum r_{i} m_{i}^{2} \) have any physical significance?"


    This page titled 2.1: Definition of Moment of Inertia is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jeremy Tatum via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.