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The moment of inertia (I) for something is
[tex]I = \int y^2 dA[/tex]
How do I get dA for a circle?
Here is what dA should look like for moment of inertia:
http://myfiles.dyndns.org/pictures/circle_dA.png
dA in this case is NOT a derivation of [tex]A = \pi r^2[/tex]. Doing that will give you the polar moment of inertia (J) which is completely different.
If the integration was done correctly, the answer you get should be
[tex]I = \frac{\pi r^4}{4}[/tex]
[tex]I = \int y^2 dA[/tex]
How do I get dA for a circle?
Here is what dA should look like for moment of inertia:
http://myfiles.dyndns.org/pictures/circle_dA.png
dA in this case is NOT a derivation of [tex]A = \pi r^2[/tex]. Doing that will give you the polar moment of inertia (J) which is completely different.
If the integration was done correctly, the answer you get should be
[tex]I = \frac{\pi r^4}{4}[/tex]
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