Main Forum Page
|
The Gyroscope Forum |
29 November 2024 01:33
|
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.
|
Question |
Asked by: |
Oliver |
Subject: |
A gyroscope spinning within a gyroscope |
Question: |
Hi, I'm not a mathematician, or into gyroscopes in any way, but i just got thinking about what the effect would be of adding another axis of rotation to a gyroscope (basically allowing, what would normally be, the gimbal's axle to also be free to take any orientation). You could take this further by allowing, what would normally be, the frame's axle to also take any orientation, and so on... Basically placing a gyroscope within a gyroscope.
Would this work? And if so, are there any equations for it?
Could you, theoretically, continue adding more and more free axles of orientation, an infinite number possibly!
There may well be an obvious answer, but bearing in mind i know nothing about gyroscopes, i was hoping someone would enlighten me on the subject. |
Date: |
3 October 2007
|
report abuse
|
|
Answers (Ordered by Date)
|
Answer: |
Chris Maitland - 12/10/2007 05:35:16
| | With a gyroscope in operation with freedom in all three axes the rotor will maintain its spin axis direction regardless of the orientation of the outer frame. Basically the spinning rotor, though free to be orientated in any direction, stays spinning where it started.
|
Report Abuse |
Add an Answer >> |
|