Lab 05: Torque or Moment of a Force
Learning Objectives
- Define torque or moment of a force.
- Locate the center of gravity of a meter-stick beam experimentally.
- Apply the principle of moments to a balanced beam system.
- Determine unknown pan masses using torque equations.
- Determine the experimental mass of a meter stick using rotational equilibrium.
- Compare experimental and true values using percent difference.
Torque, also called the moment of a force, measures the turning effect of a force about a pivot. This experiment uses a model balance to study rotational equilibrium. By balancing a meter-stick beam with hanging pans and brass weights, students can determine unknown masses and verify the principle of moments.
Target Learning Outcome
TLO 5: Define the moment of a force or torque, and apply the principle of moments.
I. Discussion of Theory
Torque or Moment of a Force
Torque is the turning effect produced by a force acting at a distance from a pivot or axis of rotation. The farther the force is applied from the pivot, the greater its turning effect.
Torque
Torque is the product of the force and the perpendicular moment arm.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| torque or moment of a force | Nยทm, Nยทcm, gยทcm, or kgยทm depending on setup | |
| force applied perpendicular to the beam | N or gram-force | |
| perpendicular distance from pivot to line of action of force | m or cm |
Moment Arm
The moment arm is the perpendicular distance from the pivot to the line of action of the force.
Fulcrum
The fulcrum is the point of support, or pivot point, about which a lever or beam turns.
Center of Gravity
The center of gravity is the point at which the entire weight of an object may be considered to act. For a uniform meter stick, it is expected to be near the 50-cm mark, but the actual value should be measured experimentally.
Clockwise and Counterclockwise Torque
A force that tends to rotate an object in the direction of the hands of a clock produces a clockwise torque. A force tending to rotate the object in the opposite direction produces a counterclockwise torque.
Rotational Equilibrium
A body is in rotational equilibrium when the net torque about any chosen axis is zero. In this condition, clockwise and counterclockwise moments are balanced.
Principle of moments
For a balanced beam, clockwise torque equals counterclockwise torque.
Sign Convention for Torque
When summing torques (), it is necessary to assign a positive sign to one direction of rotation and a negative sign to the other. You may choose either clockwise as positive or counterclockwise as positive. The specific choice does not matter, but consistency matters throughout the entire problem.
Why mass can be used in the torque equation
In this lab, balance equations are often written using masses in grams and distances in centimeters. This works because each hanging mass produces a weight , and the common factor appears on both sides of the balanced torque equation. Therefore, for comparison of torques in the same gravitational field, equations may be written in units such as gยทcm.
Two-pan balance equation
When two pans balance on opposite sides of the fulcrum, their moments are equal.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| mass of pan on the left side of the fulcrum | g | |
| mass of pan on the right side of the fulcrum | g | |
| distance of m1 from the fulcrum | cm | |
| distance of m2 from the fulcrum | cm |
Loaded pan balance equation
When a known load P is added to pan m1, the new balance distances are Lx and Ly.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| known added load, usually a 50-g brass weight | g | |
| new distance of the loaded left pan from the fulcrum | cm | |
| new distance of the right pan from the fulcrum | cm |
Meter-stick mass from torque
When the meter stick is supported away from its center of gravity, a known hanging mass can balance the stick's weight.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| total mass of pan m1 plus brass weights used to balance the stick | g | |
| distance of m3 from the pivot support | cm | |
| computed mass of the meter stick | g | |
| distance between the meter-stick center of gravity and the pivot support | cm |
Percent difference
Use percent difference to compare computed and true values.
II. Equipment / Materials Needed
Apparatus care
Keep the beam, knife-edge/pivot support, and pans stable while changing loads. Add weights gently and avoid sudden movement that may displace the beam from the support. Avoid applying excessive force that could damage the knife-edge/pivot support.
III. Diagram of Setup
Center of gravity of the beam
meter stick / beam
---------------------------------
^
|
pivot support
Adjust the pivot support until the beam balances horizontally.
The balance point is the center of gravity of the beam.
Two-pan torque balance
m1 m2
| |
v v
-----+-------------^------------+-----
<--- L1 ----->|<--- L2 --->
fulcrum
For equilibrium: m1 L1 = m2 L2
Loaded-pan torque balance
m1 + P m2
| |
v v
-----+-------------^------------+-----
<--- Lx ---->|<--- Ly ---->
fulcrum
For equilibrium: (m1 + P)Lx = m2 Ly
Meter-stick mass determination
center of gravity pivot support m3
| ^ |
v | v
--------+--------------------^----------------+---
<--------- L --------> <---- L3 ----->
For equilibrium: M L = m3 L3
IV. Procedure
A. Locate the center of gravity of the beam
- Place the beam or meter stick on the pivot support.
- Adjust the position of the support until the beam balances horizontally by itself.
- Fix the support at this position.
- Record the balance position as the center of gravity, c.g., of the beam.
B. Determine the pan masses by torque
- Hang pan on the left side of the fulcrum.
- Hang pan on the right side of the fulcrum.
- Adjust the positions of the pans until the beam balances horizontally.
- Measure the distance of from the fulcrum and record it as .
- Measure the distance of from the fulcrum and record it as .
- Write the first torque equation: .
C. Add a known load and form a second torque equation
- Add a known load to pan . A brass weight is commonly used.
- Adjust the positions of the two pans until the beam balances horizontally again.
- Measure the new distance of the loaded pan from the fulcrum and record it as .
- Measure the new distance of from the fulcrum and record it as .
- Write the second torque equation: .
- Use the two torque equations to solve for and .
- Measure the true masses of the pans using the platform balance.
- Compute percent difference for and .
D. Determine the mass of the meter stick
- Support the meter stick at the 75-cm mark using the pivot support.
- Hang pan on the shorter arm of the beam.
- Add brass weights to the pan and adjust its position until the beam balances horizontally.
- Measure the distance of the loaded pan from the pivot support and record it as .
- Determine , the total mass of pan and the brass weights placed on it.
- Measure , the distance between the center of gravity of the meter stick and the pivot support.
- Write the third torque equation: .
- Compute the experimental mass of the meter stick.
- Measure the true mass of the meter stick using the platform balance.
- Compute the percent difference between the computed mass and the true mass.
Balance condition
Read distances only when the beam is as close to horizontal as possible. A tilted beam changes the perpendicular moment arm and introduces error.
V. Student Information
VI. Expected Trend
In rotational equilibrium, a smaller mass placed farther from the fulcrum can balance a larger mass placed closer to the fulcrum. This is because torque is the product of force and distance; increasing the moment arm compensates for a smaller force. Achieving balance ultimately requires equal clockwise and counterclockwise moments around the pivot point.
VII. Data and Results
Table 5.1. Torque and Mass Data
Table 5.2. Torque Equation Record
VIII. Computations
Required computations
- Write equation 1 from the first balanced pan setup.
- Write equation 2 from the loaded pan setup.
- Solve the two equations simultaneously for and .
- Compare the computed pan masses with the true pan masses from the platform balance.
- Compute percent difference for each pan.
- Write equation 3 for the meter-stick mass setup.
- Solve for using .
- Compare computed with the true meter-stick mass from the platform balance.
- Compute the percent difference for .
Sample pan-mass computation method
Suppose the first balance equation is:
We can express in terms of :
After adding a load to , the new balance equation is:
Substitute from the first equation into the second:
Solve for :
Multiply everything by 3:
Now find :
Sample meter-stick mass computation
Suppose (pan + weights), located at a distance from the pivot support. The distance between the center of gravity and the pivot support is .
Sample center-of-gravity problem with two scale readings
A light plank rests on two scales separated by . An object is placed on the plank. The left scale reads and the right scale reads . Find the location of the system's center of gravity measured from the left scale.
Let the left scale be the pivot point (fulcrum). The sum of torques about this pivot must be zero. Let be the total weight acting at the center of gravity, at distance from the left scale.
Clockwise torque from the total weight: Counterclockwise torque from the right scale:
Equating the torques:
The center of gravity is from the left scale.
IX. Error Analysis
Common sources of error
- Beam not exactly horizontal when distances are read.
- Pivot support not positioned exactly at the center of gravity.
- Friction at the support point.
- Pan hangers not vertical.
- Distances read from the wrong reference point.
- Brass weights or pans swinging during balancing.
- Parallax error when reading the meter-stick scale.
- True masses measured with an unzeroed platform balance.
Ways to improve accuracy
- Wait for the beam to settle before recording distances.
- Read the meter-stick scale at eye level.
- Measure all distances from the fulcrum to the line of action of the hanging mass.
- Repeat the balancing process and average the distances if possible.
- Use small adjustments in pan position when approaching balance.
- Verify true masses using a calibrated platform balance.
X. Lab Report Format
A complete lab report for this experiment should include:
- Title Page: Experiment title, student names, and dates.
- Objectives: Restatement of the goals.
- Data Tables: Completed Tables 5.1 and 5.2.
- Computations: Clear derivation and substitution of values for , , and .
- Error Analysis: Calculations of percent difference.
- Observations and Conclusions: Summary of results matching the conclusion guide.
- Post-Lab Questions: Detailed answers to the questions provided.
XI. Observations and Conclusions
Conclusion guide
A strong conclusion should state whether the beam satisfied the principle of moments, compare computed and true masses, report percent differences, and identify the largest likely source of error. Mention how moving a small mass farther from the fulcrum can balance a larger mass closer to the fulcrum.
XII. Questions and Problems
-
State in words the condition for rotational equilibrium.
-
A light plank rests on two scales separated by . The left scale reads and the right scale reads . Find the location of the system's center of gravity measured from the left scale.
-
Why can masses in grams be used directly in some torque equations instead of first converting them to weights?
-
Why should the lever arm be measured from the fulcrum to the line of action of the force, not merely to the edge of the pan?
-
If the beam is balanced and one mass is moved closer to the fulcrum, what must be done to restore balance?
XIII. Selected Answer Key
Question 1: The net torque about any chosen axis must be zero, meaning the sum of clockwise torques equals the sum of counterclockwise torques. Question 2: As solved in the example, setting the left scale as the pivot gives , yielding . Question 3: Since torque is defined by weight (which is mass gravity), the constant cancels out on both sides of a balanced torque equation. Question 4: Torque depends on the perpendicular distance to the actual line of action of the weight force, which passes through the center of the pan where it hangs, not the edge. Question 5: To restore balance, the other mass must also be moved closer to the fulcrum, or its mass must be proportionally decreased, to equalize the moments again.
XIV. References
Bueche, F. J., & Hecht, E. (1997). Schaum's Outline of Theory and Problems of College Physics (9th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Instructor note
The original HTML worksheet was converted into MDX and expanded with theory, torque equations, printable diagrams, improved data tables, computation guidance, error analysis, and post-lab questions. HTML-only input fields and theme controls were converted into MDX tables and notes for compatibility with the CE content renderer.