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I have now finished my lectures on classical mechanics, but I'm a bit ashamed to say that I still don't understand the concept of torque fully.
Let's imagine this. We have a rod being acted on by the equal and opposite forces, but in different distances from the centre of rotation (attached picture). This then means that the rod will start rotating anticlockwise. To understand why the upwards force is more efficient in rotating the object we can apply an energy observation: Since the object is a rigid, rotating object, the power from the force farthest away from the rotation centre will be greater, and thus the rod will rotate anticlockwise.
Now, that observation helps me understand torque. The problem is that it does not really apply to all cases. Consider this: When the object has not started to rotate yet, there will be no power from neither of the two forces. Yet everyone knows that the object will INDEED start to rotate.
Does this mean that torque can't be understood in terms of concepts like momentum and energy? - i.e. concepts that I recognize from linear dynamics.
I ask this because the derivations in my book somehow always assume that the object to which we apply a torque is rotating already - thus they indirectly use the energy observation made earlier. But that cannot explain the case, where the object has not yet started rotating. Would this be an empirical observation? I mean, that we define angular momentum from torque, which applies to an object already rotating, but then we find out that the concept works on an even deeper level - i.e. in the case where the angular velocity is zero..
That was a lot of questions, but I have never got a good answer from anyone to this question - that is my teachers etc. etc.
If in some deeper way this actually can be explained through Lagrangian- and Hamiltonian mechanics, you are welcome to say that - I just don't like the feeling of not understanding a concept fully...
Cheers :)
Let's imagine this. We have a rod being acted on by the equal and opposite forces, but in different distances from the centre of rotation (attached picture). This then means that the rod will start rotating anticlockwise. To understand why the upwards force is more efficient in rotating the object we can apply an energy observation: Since the object is a rigid, rotating object, the power from the force farthest away from the rotation centre will be greater, and thus the rod will rotate anticlockwise.
Now, that observation helps me understand torque. The problem is that it does not really apply to all cases. Consider this: When the object has not started to rotate yet, there will be no power from neither of the two forces. Yet everyone knows that the object will INDEED start to rotate.
Does this mean that torque can't be understood in terms of concepts like momentum and energy? - i.e. concepts that I recognize from linear dynamics.
I ask this because the derivations in my book somehow always assume that the object to which we apply a torque is rotating already - thus they indirectly use the energy observation made earlier. But that cannot explain the case, where the object has not yet started rotating. Would this be an empirical observation? I mean, that we define angular momentum from torque, which applies to an object already rotating, but then we find out that the concept works on an even deeper level - i.e. in the case where the angular velocity is zero..
That was a lot of questions, but I have never got a good answer from anyone to this question - that is my teachers etc. etc.
If in some deeper way this actually can be explained through Lagrangian- and Hamiltonian mechanics, you are welcome to say that - I just don't like the feeling of not understanding a concept fully...
Cheers :)