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Centre of Mass
1 1
For discrete masses: R
mi r i For continuous bodies:
M body
R
r dm
M i
Static equilibrium: the two conditions for a body in static equilibrium are:
(1) The vector sum of all the external forces acting on the body is zero.
(2) The sum of all the turning moments about an axis through any point is zero.
F ext F i 0 Gext G i
Fl i i
0.
Circular motion
i i i
The value of Gint is zero since The internal interaction on the ith
particle by the jth particle is in line and oppositely directed to the
interaction on the jth particle by the ith particle by Newton 3.
In general so, if the system is isolated and Gext = 0,
The impulse of a force changes the momentum:
the angular momentum L is constant in time.
The angular impulse changes the angular momentum
Rotational kinetic energy:
Centripetal force
Rotational Mechanics and Relativity --- Summary sheet 5
Linear and rotational equivalents:
Gyroscopes:
Heavy flywheel under
Couple G precesses at
Angular velocity
About z-axis.
L sin G
In vectors: G = L = I
Examples: Earths precession of equinoxes
Zeeman effect; Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Einsteins theory of Special Relativity.
A frame of reference is a set of axes used to define points in space (or events in space and
time). Cartesian frames are (x, y, z), but others are commonly used.
In spacetime an event is given by (x, y, z, t).
We need a frame of reference in which to define positions, velocities, and accelerations.
Examples: rotation of axes in space. Galilean transform between S and S moving at v in x:
x=x-vt; y=y; z=z; t=t. x=x+vt; y=y; z=z; t=t. Example: train passing signals.
Rotational Mechanics and Relativity --- Summary sheet 6
Nineteenth-century physicists thought light waves must travel in a medium: the aether.
Bradley observed stellar aberration in 1725 due to motion of the Earths
orbit 3104m s1 compared to the speed of light 3108 m s1 v/c 10
4
.
This wasnt evidence for the aether (relativity also predicts aberration).
Michelson and Morley set up an optical interferometer sensitive enough
to detect aether drift. A coherent light beam was divided into two
perpendicular paths which would have a time difference
No aether drift was ever found. Einstein (1905) argued that light travelled
at a finite speed in a vacuum. He formulated two postulates:
1. The laws of physics are the same in every inertial (un-accelerated) frame.
2. The speed of light in a vacuum is the same for all observers.
These postulates have far-reaching implications for space and time.
Time intervals. The SI second is defined to be exactly 9,192,631,770 cycles of caesium 133.
Einstein devised a thought experiment that showed that a moving
observers clock ran slower than a stationary observers clock:
, where
Similarly so that
Aberration of light: Bradley measured the aberration of light, but
relativity also predicts aberration. A photon emitted from a light source L stationary in frame
S has a corresponding angle viewed from frame S given by the addition of speeds formulae:
In Bradleys case, = 90, and the direction of the photon was incoming rather
than outgoing. So sin( ) = cos( ) , v/c as Bradley measured.
Relativistic Doppler effect. Consider a pulsing light source at rest in a frame
S. The time and space between two pulses measured in frame S
is . The observer in S sees the light source
move between pulses, so the second
pulse has further to go.
Rotational Mechanics and Relativity --- Summary sheet 10
Spacetime intervals.
In 2-D Euclidean space the distance invariant is
The equivalent of Pythagorass theorem in Special Relativity
is
Spacetime (Minkowski) diagrams: We plot events
in spacetime, with the geometry of Minkowski
Space rather than Euclidean space. The path of a
photon is a straight line at 45 to the axes. The
vertical lines AA and BB represent the paths
Through space of stationary observers. The line
CC is the path (world line) of a moving observer,
with v < c. The scale is given by the invariant
distance x2 c2t2 = 1.
Relativistic momentum. The conserved
momentum is
Rotational Mechanics and Relativity --- Summary sheet 11
Causality and spacetime structure:
If one event, P, causes another Q then Q must lie in the future cone
of P, as nothing can travel faster than light. The time interval
PQ is time-like, i.e. ctPQ > xPQ. And it is possible to transform
to another frame S in which P and Q both occur at the same place,
separated only by a time interval. If the interval is space-like
i.e. ct < x, as in PR, it is possible to find a frame in which P and R are
simultaneous, and yet another in which R occurs before P. It is then not
possible for R to have been caused by P. The event R lies in the elsewhereof P.
Relativistic Dynamics: Summary.
Rotational Mechanics and Relativity --- Summary sheet 12
The Energy-Momentum invariant: We think of x and ct as two components of a space-
time four-vector, and that the length or norm of this four-vector was invariant under the
Lorentz transformation, i.e.
In the same way, p and E/c are also components of another four vector called the energy-
momentum four vector. This means that the components transform by the Lorentz
transformation but it also means that there is an associated invariant quantity (i.e. its length
or norm) which remains the same for a given system when viewed at any time in any inertial
frame. This is very powerful and helps to simplify problems considerably. The invariant is E2
p2c2 = E 2 p 2c2 = m2c4 .
,
2 2
2
Ei pi c is invariant.
i i
The energy-momentum 4-vector
We saw previously that the Lorentz transform for
space and time may be written as
ct v
c
0 0 ct
x v 0 0 x
y c
0 0 1 0 y
z z
0 0 0 1
ct and x, y, z form the components of a 4-vector,
and we can write the Lorentz transformation
more generally as b = A.b, where b and b are 4-
vectors and A is the transformation matrix which
is given by
v 0 0
c
v 0 0
A c
0 0 1 0
0 0 0 1
It can be shown that energy and momentum form a four
vector, i.e. b = (E/c, px, py, pz):
E c v
c
0 0 E c
px v 0 0 px
p c p
y 0 0 1 0 y
p p
z 0 0 0 1 z
Note
The length or norm of a 4-vector is invariant
under the Lorentz transformation. The square
of the norm is bb which in Minkowski
geometry is given by
bb = b12 b22 b32 b42
For the E-p 4-vector this is
(E2/c2) px2 py2 pz2
and for the t-r 4-vector it is
(c2t2) x2 y2 z2