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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
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The remaining two equations are thus a pair of coupled linear differential
equations for
and
.
If we define the constant
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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
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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 |
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Help: Guide to using this document |
Next: 4.8 Stability . . . |
Previous: 4.6 Euler's equations |
Mike Birse
17th May 2000