Lab 08: Moment of Inertia and Torque
Learning Objectives
- Relate torque to angular acceleration in a rotating system.
- Determine the moment of inertia of a disk, pulley, or rotating platform experimentally.
- Compare experimental moment of inertia with theoretical values.
- Identify energy losses due to bearing friction and string slip.
This placeholder is prepared for a complete laboratory experiment on rotational dynamics. It can be adapted for a rotary motion sensor, pulley-and-hanging-mass system, disk-and-axle setup, or torsional apparatus.
Torque
Torque is the rotational effect of a force applied at a perpendicular distance from an axis.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| torque | N·m | |
| moment arm or radius | m | |
| applied force | N |
Rotational form of Newton's Second Law
Net torque equals moment of inertia times angular acceleration.
Variables
| Symbol | Description | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| moment of inertia | ||
| angular acceleration |
Suggested Apparatus
Placeholder procedure outline
- Measure the mass and radius of the rotating object.
- Attach a string to the axle or pulley and connect it to a hanging mass.
- Release the mass and record angular acceleration or time of descent.
- Compute the applied torque.
- Determine experimental moment of inertia using .
- Compare the result with the theoretical moment of inertia for the chosen geometry.
- Discuss friction and rotational energy loss.
Data Table Placeholder
To complete this lab
Add the selected rotating body formula, sample computation, free-body diagram, and discussion questions about why mass distribution affects moment of inertia.