- 9.1 Angular Momentum and Torque
- Oh, this is the one SSO said was difficult.
- L=r×p
- The cross product is involved.
- If r is in the same direction as p, then L=0, which is similar to angular momentum.
- The dimension is perpendicular to r and p.
- ∣L∣=∣r∣∣p∣sinα
- =rsinα⋅∣p∣
- Multiply r projected onto the direction perpendicular to p by ∣p∣.
- =psinα⋅∣r∣
- Definition
- Torque
- Files/Screenshot 2022-12-11 at 2.50.37 AM.png
- Using the chain rule, r˙×p is derived, but it becomes v×p, so it becomes 0.
- The direction is important, it is the cross product between the r direction and the force direction.
- Therefore, if the force is centripetal, τ=0.
- Only the θ component of the force affects the torque.
- If the force is centripetal, the angular momentum only changes due to r.
- Naturally, this value depends on the origin.
- The force is the derivative of momentum, so it is the sum of all forces.
- This intuition is important for understanding the equation.
- 9.1.1 Particle Moving in a Straight Line
- Even in a straight line, there is angular momentum if the origin is not on the line.
- Conical Pendulum
- The direction of the cross product vector is important.
- “The symmetry of the two masses makes the angular momentum independent of the location of the origin along the z axis.”
- 9.2 Central Forces
- Angular momentum conservation
- I want to include the proof here.
- The elements of L are only the tangential velocity, which is the cross product between r and p.
- If the acceleration only has a radial component, the tangential velocity is constant, and the angular momentum is constant.
- Torque
- Files/Screenshot 2022-12-11 at 2.50.37 AM.png
- Using the chain rule, r˙×p is derived, but it becomes v×p, so it becomes 0.
- The direction is important, it is the cross product between the r direction and the force direction.
- Therefore, if the force is centripetal, τ=0.
- Only the θ component of the force affects the torque.
- If the force is centripetal, the angular momentum only changes due to r.
- Naturally, this value depends on the origin.
- The force is the derivative of momentum, so it is the sum of all forces.
- This intuition is important for understanding the equation.
- 9.1.1 Particle Moving in a Straight Line
- Even in a straight line, there is angular momentum if the origin is not on the line.
- Conical Pendulum
- The direction of the cross product vector is important.
- “The symmetry of the two masses makes the angular momentum independent of the location of the origin along the z axis.”
- 9.2 Central Forces
- Angular momentum conservation
- I want to include the proof here.
- Effective Energy
- The square of the polar velocity becomes r˙2+r2θ˙2.
- This is not obvious, is it okay to simply add them?
- Is it because it is the dot product of velocity vectors?
- Total - Eeff= r-direction KE
- Therefore, in the Energy Diagram, when Total = Eeff, the r-direction velocity is 0.
- If we calculate the initial condition momentum and it is conserved, we can say it is constant.
- This is because it is a central force.
- Assuming it is constant, if r decreases, θ˙ increases by the same amount.
- 9.3
- 9.4
- Rigid body
-
- These systems consist of particles whose positions with respect to the COM are fixed.