Physics Laboratory Report: Moment of Inertia and Energy in Rotational Motion
Physics Laboratory Report: Moment of Inertia and Energy in Rotational Motion
Name
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Introduction
1.1 Objectives
There are numerous objectives of this lab including to explore the rotational motion of rigid
bodies with respect to angular position and angular velocity at a constant angular acceleration,
evaluate the relation of those angular quantities to the linear position and linear velocity in a
system with a bound motion including translational and rotational motion, to experimentally
determine the moment of inertia of an object and compare to the calculated one; and demonstrate
In translational motion an object’s mass is its tendency to resist motion. The larger the
object, with higher mass, the harder for the object to move. Similarly in rotational motion, the
moment of inertia is the tendency to resist rotation. Moment of inertia can be calculated by the
following equation : I = ∑mR2. Unlike translational motion, the distance form the center of
motion affects how fast an object will rotate. The larger the radius of distance form the center of
an object the higher moment of inertia and the alower the object will move. It is important to
note that the moment of inertia is the sum of all objects in the system. This means different
masses on the same object will add to the total resistance to rotation. Also important is different
rigid objects have different calculations to moment of inertia. For example a solid disk I is
calculated as ½ mr2.
in transition and rotation moment. The enrgy initial is equal to the energy final. In our system we
need to tak into account the translational motion of the base and objects on the pulley changes
from gravitational potential energy and kinetic energy. Manipulating the equation we get the
2 Experimental Procedures
For this lab we followed the lab manual procedure and used capstone raw data provided by our
instructor
Setup
Equations:
I = (m1+m2)*d
Icom = 1/2mr2
Results
A
Base h [m] Ꞷ[rad/s] V [m/s] I [kg*m2]
1 0.0353 2.507 0.0313 0.0682
2 0.0982 4.205 0.0526 0.0674
3 0.2160 6.165 0.0771 0.0690
B
Base h [m] Ꞷ [rad/s] V [m/s] I [kg*m2]
1 0.0248 1.576 0.0197 0.1091
2 0.0767 2.798 0.0350 0.1071
3 0.1528 3.934 0.0492 0.1079
C
Base h [m] Ꞷ [rad/s] V [m/s] I [kg*m2]
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D
Base h [m] Ꞷ [rad/s] V [m/s] I [ kg*m2]
1 0.0589 1.505 0.0188 0.0513
2 0.1532 2.418 0.0302 0.0517
3 0.2867 3.256 0.0407 0.0533
E. %
Object % diff.
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Base -
Base + 2 mass 6.48%
Base + disk com 16.1%
Base + disk off com 21.07%
Calculations
Table II.
Table III.
E - % diff.
% = abs (experimental / theoretical) / theoretical *100
% = (0.1080 – 0.0080) / 0.0080 * 100
cases look similar, however after performing an error analysis only the mass and the two masses
had minimal error. Calculations of the base the disk on and off the center of the mass had error
acceptable. This is because the values are such small numbers little deviation has greater effect.
Experimental moment of inertia was calculated using conservation of energy and the fact that the
moment of inertia is the sum of all the object rotating. So it is the moment of entire roatting
system, and the specific object moment of inertia could be calculated by subtracting I base. The
values were reported by the capstone software and the calculations were directly were indirectly
Conclusions
This experiment was overall successful. In this lab we explored rotational motion with respect to
angular velocity. We were able to theoretically and experimentally determine the moment of
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inertia of an object. Finally we were able to show conservation of energy in a rotatin system. To
improve our results could be useful if we could do this lab in person to achieve better results.