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If a body has an axis of symmetry ,
then this is one of the
principal axes of the moment-of-inertia tensor. The other two principal
axes
and
are can be chosen to be any two orthogonal
vectors in the plane perpendicular to .
The symmetry means that
the principal moments about these axes are the same,
This simplifies the equations of motion of a symmetric body. For free
rotations, in the absence of any torque, Euler's equations become
The remaining two equations are thus a pair of coupled linear differential
equations for
and .
If we define the constant
These may be solved by various techniques. One possibility is to decouple the
equations, by differentiating the first equation with respect to
and using
the second to substitute for
.
This leaves us with a
familiar-looking equation for :
By whatever method, we find that the solutions to these
equations are
The angular momentum of the body is
In contrast, for a space-fixed observer the angular momentum is constant since there is no torque. That observer sees and as precessing about the fixed direction provided by . As discussed in the textbooks, this can be pictured in terms of one cone rolling on another.
In the special case where ,
and
are nearly parallel, we can find the rate of precession seen by
the space-fixed observer relatively easily. With respect to the body-fixed
axes,
precesses about the symmetry axis at the
rate .
For the space-fixed observer, these body-fixed axes are rotating
at a rate
(about an axis very close to ).
Hence for that observer the net rate of precession is
For an object like a rugby ball with , the rate of precession is slower than the rate of rotation, while for something like a plate with the rate of precession is faster.
Textbook references
Home: PC 1672 home page |
Up: 4 Rigid-body motion |
Weekly plan |
Help: Guide to using this document |
Next: 4.8 Stability . . . |
Previous: 4.6 Euler's equations |
Mike Birse
17th May 2000