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Moment of Inertia

The document lists the area moments of inertia for various shapes, including circles, annuli, sectors, semicircles, quarter circles, ellipses, rectangles, triangles, and hexagons. It provides the formulas to calculate the area moment of inertia for each shape with respect to different axes through the centroid. It also notes that the parallel axis theorem can be used to determine the area moment of inertia for any plane region with respect to any axis.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
360 views4 pages

Moment of Inertia

The document lists the area moments of inertia for various shapes, including circles, annuli, sectors, semicircles, quarter circles, ellipses, rectangles, triangles, and hexagons. It provides the formulas to calculate the area moment of inertia for each shape with respect to different axes through the centroid. It also notes that the parallel axis theorem can be used to determine the area moment of inertia for any plane region with respect to any axis.

Uploaded by

bansal123456789
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© © All Rights Reserved
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List of moment of areas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of area moments of inertia. The area moment of inertia or second moment of area has a unit of dimension length4, and should not be confused with the mass moment of inertia. If the piece is thin, however, the mass moment of inertia equals the area density times the area moment of inertia. Each is with respect to a horizontal axis through the centroid of the given shape, unless otherwise specified.

Area moments of inertia[edit]


Refere nce

Description

Figure

Area moment of inertia

Comment

a filled circular area of radius r

[1]

an annulus of inner radiusr1 and outer radiusr2

For thin tubes, this is approximately equal to:

or

a filled circular sector of angle in radia ns and radiusr with respect to an axis through the centroid of the sector and the centre of the circle

This formula is valid for only for 0

a filled semicircle with radius r with respect to a horizontal line passing through the centroid of the area

[2]

a filled semicircle as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the base

This is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem and the fact that the distance between

[2]

these two axes is

a filled semicircle as above but with respect to a vertical axis through the centroid

[2]

a filled quarter circle with radius r entirely in the 1st quadrant of the Cartesian coordinate system

[3]

a filled quarter circle as above but with respect to a horizontal or vertical axis through the centroid

This is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem and the fact that the distance between

[3]

these two axes is

a filled ellipse w hose radius along the x-axis is a and whose radius along the y-axis is b

a filled rectangular area with a base width of b and height h

[4]

a filled rectangular area as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the base

This is a result from the parallel axis theorem

[4]

a filled rectangular area as above but with respect to an axis collinear, where r is the perpendicular distance from the centroid of the rectangle to the axis of interest

This is a result from the parallel axis theorem

[4]

a filled triangular area with a base width of b and height h with respect to an axis through the centroid

[5]

a filled triangular area as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the base

This is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem

[5]

a filled regular hexagon with a side length of a

The result is valid for both a horizontal and a vertical axis through the centroid, and therefore is also valid for an axis with arbitrary direction that passes through the origin.

Any plane region with a known area moment of inertia for a parallel axis. (Main Article parallel axis theorem)

This can be used to determine the second moment of area of a rigid body about any axis, given the body's moment of inertia about a parallel axis through the object's centre of mass and the perpendicular distance (r) between the axes.

See also

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