Rotatum

In physics, rotatum is the derivative of torque with respect to time. Expressed as an equation, rotatum Ρ is:

where τ is torque and is the derivative with respect to time .

The term rotatum is not universally recognized but is commonly used. This word is derived from the Latin word rotātus meaning to rotate. The units of rotatum are force times distance per time, or equivalently, mass times length squared per time cubed; in the SI unit system this is kilogram metre squared per second cubed (kg·m2/s3), or Newtons times meter per second (N·m/s).

Relation to other physical quantities

Newton's second law for angular motion says that:

where L is angular momentum, so if we combine the above two equations:

where is moment of Inertia and is angular velocity. If the moment of inertia is not changing over time (i.e. it is constant), then:

which can also be written as:

where ς is Angular jerk.

gollark: It's planned now.
gollark: I somehow got those mixed up.
gollark: * Superset
gollark: It's not implemented in strings in the PotatOS Insanity Subset.
gollark: It is not.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.