Learning Objectives
Learning Objectives
By the end of this section, you will be able to do the following:
- Describe the right-hand rule to find the direction of angular velocity, momentum, and torque
- Explain the gyroscopic effect
- Study how Earth acts like a gigantic gyroscope
The information presented in this section supports the following AP® learning objectives and science practices:
- 4.D.3.1 The student is able to use appropriate mathematical routines to calculate values for initial or final angular momentum, or change in angular momentum of a system, or average torque or time during which the torque is exerted in analyzing a situation involving torque and angular momentum. (S.P. 2.2)
- 4.D.3.2 The student is able to plan a data collection strategy designed to test the relationship between the change in angular momentum of a system and the product of the average torque applied to the system and the time interval during which the torque is exerted. (S.P. 4.1, 4.2)
Angular momentum is a vector and, therefore, has direction as well as magnitude. Torque affects both the direction and the magnitude of angular momentum. What is the direction of the angular momentum of a rotating object like the disk in Figure 10.28? The figure shows the right-hand rule used to find the direction of both angular momentum and angular velocity. Both and are vectors—each has direction and magnitude. Both can be represented by arrows. The right-hand rule defines both to be perpendicular to the plane of rotation in the direction shown. Because angular momentum is related to angular velocity by , the direction of is the same as the direction of . Notice in the figure that both point along the axis of rotation.
Now, recall that torque changes angular momentum as expressed by
This equation means that the direction of is the same as the direction of the torque that creates it. This result is illustrated in Figure 10.29, which shows the direction of torque and the angular momentum it creates.
Let us now consider a bicycle wheel with a couple of handles attached to it, as shown in Figure 10.30. This device is popular in demonstrations among physicists, because it does unexpected things. With the wheel rotating as shown, its angular momentum is to the woman's left. Suppose the person holding the wheel tries to rotate it as in the figure. Her natural expectation is that the wheel will rotate in the direction she pushes it—but what happens is quite different. The forces exerted create a torque that is horizontal toward the person, as shown in Figure 10.30(a). This torque creates a change in angular momentum in the same direction, perpendicular to the original angular momentum , thus changing the direction of but not the magnitude of . Figure 10.30 shows how and add, giving a new angular momentum with direction that is inclined more toward the person than before. The axis of the wheel has thus moved perpendicular to the forces exerted on it, instead of in the expected direction.
Applying Science Practices: Angular Momentum and Torque
You have seen that change in angular momentum depends on the average torque applied and the time interval during which the torque is applied. Plan an experiment similar to the one shown in Figure 10.30 to test the relationship between the change in angular momentum of a system and the product of the average torque applied to the system and the time interval during which the torque is exerted. What would you use as your test system? How could you measure applied torque? What observations could you make to help you analyze changes in angular momentum? Remember that, since angular momentum is a vector, changes can relate to its magnitude or its direction.
This same logic explains the behavior of gyroscopes. Figure 10.31 shows the two forces acting on a spinning gyroscope. The torque produced is perpendicular to the angular momentum, thus the direction of the torque is changed, but not its magnitude. The gyroscope precesses around a vertical axis, since the torque is always horizontal and perpendicular to . If the gyroscope is not spinning, it acquires angular momentum in the direction of the torque (), and it rotates around a horizontal axis, falling over just as we would expect.
Earth itself acts like a gigantic gyroscope. Its angular momentum is along its axis and points at Polaris, the North Star. But Earth is slowly precessing (once in about 26,000 years) due to the torque of the Sun and the Moon on its nonspherical shape.
Check Your Understanding
Rotational kinetic energy is associated with angular momentum? Does that mean that rotational kinetic energy is a vector?
Solution
No, energy is always a scalar whether motion is involved or not. No form of energy has a direction in space and you can see that rotational kinetic energy does not depend on the direction of motion just as linear kinetic energy is independent of the direction of motion.