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Moment of inertia
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=== Compound pendulums === [[File:Mendenhall gravimeter pendulums.jpg|thumb|left|Pendulums used in Mendenhall [[gravimeter]] apparatus, from 1897 scientific journal. The portable gravimeter developed in 1890 by Thomas C. Mendenhall provided the most accurate relative measurements of the local gravitational field of the Earth.]] A [[compound pendulum]] is a body formed from an assembly of particles of continuous shape that rotates rigidly around a pivot. Its moment of inertia is the sum of the moments of inertia of each of the particles that it is composed of.<ref name="B-Paul"> {{cite book | last =Paul | first =Burton | title =Kinematics and Dynamics of Planar Machinery | publisher =Prentice Hall | date =June 1979 | isbn =978-0135160626 }}</ref><ref name=Resnick> {{cite book | last1=Halliday | first1=David | last2=Resnick | first2=Robert | last3=Walker | first3=Jearl | title=Fundamentals of physics|year=2005|publisher=Wiley | location=Hoboken, NJ | isbn=9780471216438 | edition=7th }}</ref>{{rp|pp=395β396}}<ref> {{cite book | last=French | first=A.P. | title=Vibrations and waves | year=1971 | publisher=CRC Press | location=Boca Raton, FL | isbn=9780748744473 }}</ref>{{rp|pp=51β53}} The [[resonance|natural]] [[angular frequency|frequency]] (<math>\omega_\text{n}</math>) of a compound pendulum depends on its moment of inertia, <math>I_P</math>, <math display="block">\omega_\text{n} = \sqrt{\frac{mgr}{I_P}},</math> where <math>m</math> is the mass of the object, <math>g</math> is local acceleration of gravity, and <math>r</math> is the distance from the pivot point to the center of mass of the object. Measuring this frequency of oscillation over small angular displacements provides an effective way of measuring moment of inertia of a body.<ref name="Uicker"/>{{rp|pp=516β517}} Thus, to determine the moment of inertia of the body, simply suspend it from a convenient pivot point <math>P</math> so that it swings freely in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the desired moment of inertia, then measure its natural frequency or period of oscillation (<math>t</math>), to obtain <math display="block">I_P = \frac{mgr}{\omega_\text{n}^2} = \frac{mgrt^2}{4\pi^2},</math> where <math>t</math> is the period (duration) of oscillation (usually averaged over multiple periods). ==== Center of oscillation ==== A simple pendulum that has the same natural frequency as a compound pendulum defines the length <math>L</math> from the pivot to a point called the [[center of oscillation]] of the compound pendulum. This point also corresponds to the [[center of percussion]]. The length <math>L</math> is determined from the formula, <math display="block">\omega_\text{n} = \sqrt{\frac{g}{L}} = \sqrt{\frac{mgr}{I_P}},</math> or <math display="block">L = \frac{g}{\omega_\text{n}^2} = \frac{I_P}{mr}.</math> The [[seconds pendulum]], which provides the "tick" and "tock" of a grandfather clock, takes one second to swing from side-to-side. This is a period of two seconds, or a natural frequency of <math>\pi \ \mathrm{rad/s}</math> for the pendulum. In this case, the distance to the center of oscillation, <math>L</math>, can be computed to be <math display="block">L = \frac{g}{\omega_\text{n}^2} \approx \frac{9.81 \ \mathrm{m/s^2}}{(3.14 \ \mathrm{rad/s})^2} \approx 0.99 \ \mathrm{m}.</math> Notice that the distance to the center of oscillation of the seconds pendulum must be adjusted to accommodate different values for the local acceleration of gravity. [[Kater's pendulum]] is a compound pendulum that uses this property to measure the local acceleration of gravity, and is called a [[gravimeter]].
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