Physics 430: Lecture 6 Center of Mass, Angular Momentum: Dale E. Gary
Physics 430: Lecture 6 Center of Mass, Angular Momentum: Dale E. Gary
You can think of the center of mass as a weighted average of the positions of
each mass element, i.e. weighted by the mass of that element, or
equivalently it is the vector sum of the r, each multiplied by the fraction of
mass at that location.
To get a feeling for CM, let’s look at the center of mass for a two particle
system, which might, for example, represent the Sun and Earth, or two stars
in orbit around each other.
September 17, 2008
Center of Mass and Equation of Motion
1 N m1r1 m2r2
In this case, R
M 1
m r
m1 m2
, which can be seen in the figure.
m1 CM
It is easy to show that the distance of the CM from m1 and
m2 is in the ratio m2/m1. The figure shows the case where r1 R m2
m1 4m2. In particular, if m1 >> m2, then the CM will be r2
very close to m1.
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Note that the time derivative of the center of mass for N particles is just the
CM velocity N N
R 1 m r 1 p
M 1 M 1
so the momentum of an N-particle system is related to its CM by P M.R
Differentiating this expression, we get the very useful relation for the equation
of motion: Fext MR
This says that the CM of a collection of particles moves as if the external forces
on all of the individual particles were concentrated at the CM. This is why we
can treat extended objects (e.g. a baseball) as a point mass.
September 17, 2008
Calculating the Center of Mass
Although we developed the foregoing for a set of point particles, the result
obviously applies to extended objects by replacing the summation with an
integral, and treating infinitesimal parts of the object as having mass dm.
The CM expression then becomes 1
M
R r dm
where the integral extends over the object.
If you have a uniform extended object of total mass M, you may be given
the size or volume, from which you can determine the density, or
alternatively you may be given the density, from which you determine the
volume. In either case, the integral over the mass is replaced by an
integral over the volume 1
R
M r dV
1
zdz rdr d
2
V 0
1 1 R2 z2
zdz rdr 2 zdz 2
Rz / h
V 0 V h
which then leads to the previous result.
If you do not know the volume of a cone, the way to calculate it parallels the
above, but without the z:
V dV rdr d dz
dz rdr d
2
0
R 2 z 2 R 2 h
dz rdr 2 dz 2
Rz / h h
0 0 h 3
As each planet moves around the Sun, a line drawn from the
planet to the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal times.
The situation is shown in the figure below, where we show two segments of the orbit that
I will approximate as triangles (the approximation becomes exact in the limit as the width
of the triangles goes to zero). Kepler’s 2nd law is equivalent to saying that so long as the
elapsed time dt for the planet to go from P to Q is the same as for it to go from P’ to Q’,
then the areas of these two triangles must be equal. Equivalently, dA/dt = constant.