Home : Gallery : History : Uses : Behaviour : Maths : Forum : Propulsion : Links : Glossary
Main Forum Page

The Gyroscope Forum

1 December 2024 20:45

Welcome to the gyroscope forum. If you have a question about gyroscopes in general, want to know how they work, or what they can be used for then you can leave your question here for others to answer. You may also be able to help others by answering some of the questions on the site.

Search the forum:  
 

Question

Asked by: KARTIKE KARWAL
Subject: moment of inertia
Question: i want to know how can we find the moment of inertia of a gyroscope and the angular velocity of precession.
secondly pls tell me a simple method to determine the moment of inertia also,and if i want to run gyroscope through an electric motor pls tell wat would be the suitable rpm of the motor to have at least minimum amount of precession.pls send answers soon. thanx bye
Date: 11 June 2004
report abuse


Answers (Ordered by Date)


Answer: Venkat Gopalakrishnan - 27/07/2004 20:15:24
 Gyroscope torque T = I * a1 * a2
I = Mass moment of inertia about the primary spinning axis
a1 = angular velocity of the disk abouts its primary axis
a2 = angular velocity of precession

So if you place min weights of W , then applied torque = W * L
L= distance between the weight and the centre of the disk thickness.

So now we have W * L = I * a1 * a2

so Motor speed required for a precession of a2 radians/sec is

a1 = W * L/(I * a2) radians/sec

Divide this by 2 * pi to get in Rotations per sec

(pi = 22/7)

Moment of Inertia
---------------------
I can be determined analytically if the disk is a cylinder. In that case,
I = M * R * R/2
But if the disk is complex, then we can determine it experimentally.
But be advised that that it is possible to determine "I" for complex disk by taking the "I" for all the pieces.

Report Abuse
Add an Answer >>
Website. Copyright © 2024 Glenn Turner. All rights reserved. site info
Do not copy without prior permission. Click here for gyroscope products