Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 Hi, Does someone know where the mass centre of a half sinus period is located? I know pi/2 on the x-axes but on the y-axes ? to give an idea for a half circle it's located at R*4/(3*pi) that is 0.42 for R=1
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 whats a half sinus period? I mean 0 to pi , only the first half of one full sinus. consider a plate that has that shape, at which point would I have to hang it so it would stay flat. (centre of mass)
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 hmm... i still dont know what a sinus is.. the centre of mass will lie on the line of symmetry. if u know one condition on the position of centre of mass , and u know the line of symmetry , then u should know the point itself.
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 hmm... i still dont know what a sinus is.. the centre of mass will lie on the line of symmetry. if u know one condition on the position of centre of mass ' date=' and u know the line of symmetry , then u should know the point itself.[/quote'] we clearly have a communication problem y=sin(x) <--a sinus http://www.jazzalmanach.de/images/musikalswissenschaft/sinus.jpg (I want to calculate te potential energy of a water wave.)
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 well i can't remember the formula.. just find the formula for the centre of mass for a lamina.
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GeometricCentroid.html just take the density fucntion to be constant. i remember doing this is my mechanics a level. and i remember not having anything to do with double integrals... but have a go anyway
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 http://mathworld.wolfram.com/GeometricCentroid.html just take the density fucntion to be constant. i remember doing this is my mechanics a level. and i remember not having anything to do with double integrals... but have a go anyway I know the formula but I was hoping someone already did the double integrals and simplefied it. (I expect something simple) btw I got integral ((y+cos(Z)) * Z * tg(Z)).dZ (Z from pi/2 to 0, with y the constant I'm looking for) but I serioulsy doubt it's correct, since I made it
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 well i just computed it.. i got the [math]\bar{y}=\frac{\pi}{8}[/math]
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 well i just computed it.. i got the [math']\bar{y}=\frac{\pi}{8}[/math] This sure can be correct and which program did you use for it?
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 if the density function is constant then the formula can be simplified to [math]\bar{y}=\frac{\frac{1}{2}\int_{0}^{\pi}y^2}{M}[/math] where M is just the area under the curve
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 This sure can be correctand which program did you use for it? but of course i did it by hand... in the above simplified formula the the bounds in the integral only works for this example!! dont go using it for other laminas as well. the general formula is the same except you have to sort out the limits.
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 M the surface is 2 but I fail to see the simplifying to y² = sin²(x) anyway it looks OK so thanks for your help. my math is failing me.
bloodhound Posted December 28, 2004 Posted December 28, 2004 i forgot the add that the integral is with respect to x.... anyway this is how you do it you find M easily giving its value 2. then u have to find [math]\int \int_{A}y dA[/math] where A is the area bounded by the sin curve between 0 and pi and the horizontal axis. writing that as interated integral you get [math]\int_{0}^{\pi} \int_{0}^{\sin(x)}y dy dx[/math] [math]=\int_{0}^{\pi}[\frac{y^2}{2}]_{0}^{\sin(x)} dx[/math] [math]=\frac{1}{2}\int_{0}^{\pi}\sin^2(x) dx[/math] [math]=\frac{1}{2}\frac{\pi}{2}[/math] dividing by M u get . [math]\bar{y}=\frac{\pi}{8}[/math] actually there is the constant density function in both the M integral and the above one... but since they are constants, you can take them out the integral in both of them and they will just cancel out.
Kedas Posted December 28, 2004 Author Posted December 28, 2004 Thanks for the full explanation I'm sure that I can figure it out for myself next time
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