Rigid body dynamics Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Rigid body dynamics differs from particle dynamics in that the body takes up space and can rotate, which introduces other consdierations. Equations from particle dynamics can be generalized to rigid body dynamics as follows:
The equation for particle linear momentum is
Rigid Body Linear Momentum
where m is the particle's mass, v is its velocity, and fi is one of the N forces acting on it. Assuming constant mass, this reduces to
To generalize, assume a body of finite mass and size is composed of such particles. There exist internal forces, acting between any two particles, and external forces, acting only on the outside of the mass. Each particle has a mass dm and a position vector r. Thus, the linear momentum equation of any given particle would look like this:
If the equation for each particle were added together, the internal forces would cancel out, since by Newton's third law, any such force would have opposite magnitudes on the two particles. Also, the left side would become an integral over the entire body, and the second derivative operator could come out of the integral, leaving
Letting M be the total mass, the left side can be multiplied and divided by M without changing the validity:
However, is the formula for the position of center of mass. Denoting this by rcm, the equation reduces to
Thus, linear momentum equations can be extended to rigid bodies by denoting that they describe the motion of the center of mass of the body.
