Center of Mass: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:45, 1 December 2015
Claimed by Alex Huynh (ahuynh9)
The Main Idea
The center of mass of an object is the point in space where if a force was applied, the object moves according to Newton's laws without rotation. At the center of mass, the distribution of mass is balanced, and the average of the weighted position coordinates of the distributed mass defines its coordinates. Mechanical calculations are often simplified with respect to the center of mass of objects.
When a force is not applied to the center of mass:
A Mathematical Model
The position of the center of mass of an object can be found by summating the product of each point mass and its relative linear position and dividing by the sum by the total mass.
This equation can then be extended to three dimensions.
When calculating the center of mass for a continuous distribution of mass, the expression becomes an infinite sum that can be expressed in the form of an integral.
Examples
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Simple
Middling
Difficult
Connectedness
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History
The concept of center of mass was first introduced by Archimedes while he worked to simplify assumptions about gravity that amounted to a uniform field, thus arriving at the mathematical properties of the center of mass. In an experiment, Archimedes observed that the torque exerted on a lever by weights resting at various points along the lever is the same as what it would be if all of the weights were moved to a single point—their center of mass. He developed mathematical techniques for finding the centers of mass of objects of uniform density of various well-defined shapes.
See also
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Further reading
PhysicsLab [1]
HyperPhysics [2]
Wikipedia [3]
External links
PhysicsLab [4]
HyperPhysics [5]
Wikipedia [6]
References
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