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Lecture 34: Principal Axes of Inertia • We’ve spent the last few lectures deriving the general expressions for L and Trot in terms of the inertia tensor • Both expressions would be a great deal simpler if the inertia tensor was diagonal. That is, if: I ij = I iδ ij or I1 0 0 I= 0 0 I2 0 0 I3 • Then we could write I ijω j = Li = j 1 Trot = 2 I iδ ijω j = I iωi j i, j 1 I ijωiω j = 2 i, j 1 I iδ ijωiω j = 2 I iωi2 i • We’ve already seen that the elements of the inertia tensor transform under rotations • So perhaps we can rotate to a set of axes for which the tensor (for a given rigid body) is diagonal – These are called the principal axes of the body – All the rotational problems you did in first-year physics dealt with rotation about a principal axis – that’s why the equations looked simpler. • If a body is rotating solely about a principal axis (call it the i axis) then: Li = I iωi , or L = I i • If we can find a set of principal axes for a body, we call the three non-zero inertia tensor elements the principal moments of inertia Finding the Principal Moments • In general, it’s easiest to first determine the principal moments, and then find the principal axes • We know that if we’re rotating about a principal axis, we have: L=I A principal moment I ijω j also holds. So, • But the general relation Li = j L1 = I ω1 = I11ω1 + I12ω 2 + I13ω3 L2 = I ω 2 = I 21ω1 + I 22ω 2 + I 23ω3 L3 = I ω3 = I 31ω1 + I 32ω 2 + I 33ω3 • Rearranging the equations gives: ( I11 − I ) ω1 + I12ω 2 + I13ω3 = 0 I 21ω1 + ( I 22 − I ) ω 2 + I 23ω3 = 0 I 31ω1 + I 32ω 2 + ( I 33 − I ) ω3 = 0 • Linear algebra fact: – We can consider this as a system of equations for the ωi – Such a system has a solution only if the determinant of the coefficients is zero • In other words, we need: I11 − I I12 I 21 I 31 I 22 − I I 32 I13 I 23 = 0 I 33 − I • The determinant results in a cubic equation for I • The three solutions are the three principal moments of inertia for the body (one corresponding to each principal axis) • And this brings us the resolution of the apparent contradiction between freshman-level physics, in which there were three moments of inertia, and this course, where we needed 6 numbers – In the earlier course, only rotations about principal axes were considered! Finding the Principal Axes • Now all that’s left to do is find the principal axes. We do this by solving the system of equations for ωi – Using one of the possible values of I – call it I1 – This will give the direction of the first principal axis • It turns out that we won’t be able to find all three components – But we can determine the ratio ω1 : ω 2 : ω 3 – And that’s enough to figure out the direction of the first principle axis (in whatever coordinate system we’re using) Example: Dumbbell • Consider the same dumbbell that appeared last lecture, and define the coordinate system as follows: ( −b, b,0) m m 2b 2 I = m 2b 2 0 2b 2 2b 2 0 (b, −b,0) 0 1 1 0 0 = 2b 2 m 1 1 0 4b 2 0 0 2 • So the equation we need to solve is: 1− I 1 0 1 1− I 0 =0 0 0 2−I ( 2 − I ) (1 − I )2 − 1 = 0 (2 − I )[I 2 − 2I ] = 0 I (2 − I ) ( I − 2) = 0 I = ( 0, 2 or 2 ) × 2mb2 • Let’s find the principal axis associated with I = 0: ω1 + ω 2 = 0 ω1 + ω 2 = 0 4ω3 = 0 • So the ratio of the angular momentum components in our coordinate system when the object it rotating about the principal axis with I = 0 is: ω1 : ω 2 : ω3 = 1: −1: 0 meaning the axis is defined by the vector: r = ex − e y In other words, along the axis of the dumbbell If an object has an axis of symmetry, that axis is always a principal axis • What about the other principal axes? – The axes associated with I = 4mb2 are: −ω1 + ω 2 = 0 ω1 − ω 2 = 0 0=0 • There’s not much information in those equations! – For example, the z component could be anything • This means that any two axes perpendicular to the axis of the dumbbell can be taken as principal axes • Note that the principal axes one finds can depend both on the shape of the body and on the point about which it’s rotating – Look over Examples 11.5 and 11.6 in the text – They show that one finds different principal axes for a uniform cube depending on whether it’s rotating about a corner or about the center of mass When Can We Find Principal Axes? • We can always write down the cubic equation that one must solve to determine the principal moments • But if we want to interpret these as physically meaningful quantities, the roots of that cubic have to be real – Recall that in general, cubics can have two complex roots • Fortunately, we’re not in the general case here • The inertia tensor is both real and symmetric – in particular, it satisfies: I ij = I ij* • Matrices that satisfy this restriction are called Hermitian • For such matrices, the principal moments can always be found, and they are always real (see proof in text) This mathematics will come up again in Quantum Mechanics Principal Moments ↔ Eigenvalues Principal Axes ↔ Eigenfunctions