Creative Commons License Copyright © Michael Richmond. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Workshop 2A: Moments of inertia in theory and practice

Today you will examine the moments of inertia of two objects:

Your job is to calculate the moments of inertia from theory, and also to determine the moments of inertia from an experiment in which these objects are spun around and around. The goal in the end is to see if the theoretical and experimental values agree to within their uncertainties.

Each group will hand in a report as homework, due at a future class meeting.

Tips for success:

  1. use units of grams, centimeters, radians and seconds for all your measurements and your calculations. The results will be easier to write and discuss this way.
  2. make two trials of all measurements involving the ring, and two trials of all measurements involving the rod
  3. do not confuse the radius of the ring with its diameter; I did, and it took me three hours to figure out why everything was coming out wrong :-(
  4. when I did this experiment, I found values within the following rough ranges If you find values outside these ranges, you may have an error in units ...


The ring, in practice

Attach the RMS with its 3-step pulley near the top of an aluminum rod, far above the level of the tabletop. Clamp the Super Pulley onto the RMS, on the side pointing away from the table.

You need to wrap a piece of black thread around the MIDDLE step of the 3-step pulley. Tie the thread in a knot anchored in the hole of the middle or largest step.

This would be a good time to measure the radius of this middle step. Use the vernier calipers with digital readout.

To the other end of the thread, tie a 5-gram plastic hanger from the blue mass set. Do NOT place any additional mass on the hanger.

Step 1:

These measurements will allow you to determine the moment of inertia of (the RMS apparatus plus the aluminum disk).

Step 2:

These measurements will allow you to determine the moment of inertia of (the RMS apparatus plus the aluminum disk plus the ring).


At this point, show your measurements to an instructor. Do not move forward until your values are checked and approved.


The brass weights, in practice

Step 3:

Remove the ring and aluminum disk. Attach the rod -- without the brass weights -- to the 3-step pulley. The rod should sit within a set of guides on opposite sides of the 3-step pulley.

These measurements will allow you to determine the moment of inertia of (the RMS apparatus plus the rod).

Step 4:

Attach the brass weights to each end of the rod, so that the outer face of each weight is flush with the outer end of the rod.

These measurements will allow you to determine the moment of inertia of (the RMS apparatus plus the rod plus weights).


At this point, show your measurements to an instructor. Do not move forward until your values are checked and approved.


Moments of inertia in theory

Measure the properties of the ring. Calculate its moment of inertia, and the uncertainty in that moment of inertia.

Place the two brass weights at the very ends of the rod. Measure the distance of each weight from the center of the rod, and the mass of each weight. Calculate the moment of inertia of the two brass weights alone (ignoring the rod's contribution), and the uncertainty in this moment of inertia.




You must reach this point by the end of the class period, with all the measurements you need. If there is still time left in the class, move forward with the calculations so I can help you!




Computing moments of inertia

For each of your datasets, you should make a graph of distance fallen (on the y-axis) versus time squared (on the x-axis). Compute the slope of the best-fit straight line to your data, and the uncertainty in that slope. Then calculate the linear acceleration of the hanger, in centimeters per second per second, plus its uncertainty.

If you know the mass of the hanger, and its acceleration, you can compute the tension T in the string; it will NOT be (mass) * (g), but something slightly different. Find the tension, and its uncertainty.

The thread pulls with this tension at the rim of the middle step of the 3-step pulley. Compute the torque exerted by the string around the axis of the 3-step pulley, and its uncertainty.

You can turn the linear acceleration of the hanger into an angular accelertion of the 3-step pulley. Do so. Determine the uncertainty in this angular acceleration, too.

Now, with both torque on the apparatus, and angular acceleration of the apparatus, you can for each case compute a moment of inertia -- and uncertainty. Do so.

We are interested in the moment of inertia of the RING ONLY, and the moment of inertia of the BRASS WEIGHTS ONLY. You have enough information now to figure out these quantities, and associated uncertainties. Do so.


The Big Result

Do the moments of inertia from theory agree with the moments of inertia you measured in the experiment? Do they agree within the uncertainties? Explain. Be quantitative.


Creative Commons License Copyright © Michael Richmond. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.