Skip to content

Angular Momentum

Simulation loading

Open Model Lab is preparing the live lab, controls, and graph surface for this concept.

Wrap-up

What you learned

Recommended next
Open concept testCheck whether the core ideas are ready without leaving this concept.
Read next
Rolling MotionUse the same inertia story where translation and rotation share one motion.

Key takeaway

  1. Angular momentum combines rotational inertia and spin through .
  2. A wider rotor at the same spin carries more angular momentum because its moment of inertia is larger.
  3. If angular momentum stays fixed while rises, the rotor must spin more slowly.

Common misconception

A faster-spinning rotor must always have more angular momentum than a slower one.

Angular momentum depends on both and . A wide, slow rotor can carry the same angular momentum as a compact, fast rotor.

Read how and combine into , then use the same-L map to watch spin trade against radius.

  1. Angular momentum of this rotor

    Angular momentum becomes larger when either the moment of inertia or the angular speed becomes larger.

  2. Conserved-spin relation

    If angular momentum stays fixed while moment of inertia changes, angular speed must change in the opposite way.

  3. Rim-speed link

    Rim speed helps you compare the straight-line speed of one mass with the rotor's angular speed, but it is not the same thing as angular momentum.

Why it behaves this way

Explanation

Angular momentum is rotational motion packaged into one quantity: . Just as linear momentum uses mass and speed, angular momentum uses rotational inertia and angular speed.

On this bench, the total moving mass stays the same while you change only two things: how far the masses sit from the axis and how fast the rotor spins. That makes two key comparisons visible: keeping the same spin does not always keep the same angular momentum, and keeping the same angular momentum does not always mean keeping the same spin.

Key ideas

01Angular momentum combines rotational inertia and angular speed through . A rotor can have large angular momentum because it spins quickly, because its mass sits far from the axis, or because both happen together.
02Moving the same mass outward raises , so the same angular momentum can be carried with a smaller angular speed.
03If external torque is negligible and decreases, must increase so that stays the same.

Worked examples

Solve the live rotor

Open examples when you want to see the same idea walked through step by step.

Frozen walkthrough

Step through the frozen example

Frozen walkthrough
Use the current rotor state as evidence. First compute the moment of inertia and angular momentum from the live radius and spin rate. Then ask what spin rate a compact reference layout would need to carry that same angular momentum.

Supporter unlocks saved study tools, exact-state sharing, and the richer review surfaces that support this guided flow.

View plans
Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current setup, what moment of inertia and angular momentum does the rotor have?

Mass radius

0.55 m

Angular speed

2.4 rad/s

Moving mass

6 kg

1. Build the current moment of inertia

For this bounded rotor use , where and the moving mass is .

2. Insert the live radius

With , the ring contribution is , so the total moment of inertia is .

3. Multiply by the live angular speed

Then , so the angular momentum is .

Current moment of inertia and angular momentum

This mid-radius layout carries angular momentum through a balanced mix of spin rate and mass distribution.

Quick test

Loading saved test state.

Accessibility

Accessibility

Open the text-first descriptions when you need the simulation and graph translated into words.

The simulation shows a face-on rotor with six equal masses attached to spokes around a central hub. The masses can move inward or outward together, and the rotor spins at an adjustable angular speed while a curved arrow near the hub marks the direction of rotation.

Optional overlays can show the current radius, a tangential-speed arrow on one mass, equal-mass labels, and a compact reference ring that reports the angular speed needed to carry the same angular momentum there. The same live state drives the readout and the graphs.

Graph summary

The rotation-angle graph is linear in time because each fixed setup keeps one constant angular speed through the clip. Faster setups make steeper lines, while slower wide same-L setups sweep out less angle in the same time.

The angular-momentum map rises with radius when angular speed is held fixed because the moment of inertia increases. The same-L spin map falls with radius because keeping angular momentum fixed requires lower angular speed at larger radius.

Bench tools and share links

Keep stable concept links and exact-state sharing tucked away until you actually need to relaunch or share the bench.

Try this setup

Jump to a named bench state or copy the one you are looking at now. Shared links reopen the same controls, graph, overlays, and compare context.

Current bench

Lab baseline preset

This bench is currently showing one of the concept's authored presets.

Open default bench

Saved setups

Saved setups are a Supporter study tool. Stable concept links still work for everyone.

Checking saved setup access

Open Model Lab is resolving whether this bench can save locally, sync to an account, or open Supporter-only compare tools.

Copy current setup

Exact-state sharing is part of Supporter. Stable concept and section links still stay available.

Stable links

Progress and next steps

Keep progress signals, starter-track handoffs, and review prompts available without letting them compete with the live lesson flow.

Progress

Loading progress

Loading saved concept progress for this browser or synced account before showing completion status.