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Torque

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Wrap-up

What you learned

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Rotational Inertia / Moment of InertiaKeep the same twist and change where the mass sits.

Key takeaway

  1. Torque depends on both lever arm distance and the perpendicular part of the force.
  2. A large force aimed through the pivot can still create almost no turning effect.
  3. For this fixed-inertia bench, larger torque means larger angular acceleration.

Common misconception

The biggest force always gives the biggest turning effect.

Not unless it also has a large moment arm. A smaller force farther from the pivot can create more torque than a bigger force applied close in.

  1. Torque from force geometry

    Torque increases when the force acts farther from the pivot and when more of the force is perpendicular to the bar.

  2. Torque from the perpendicular part

    Only the perpendicular component twists the bar. The component along the bar does not add torque.

  3. Rotational response

    With fixed rotational inertia, the sign and size of torque set the sign and size of angular acceleration.

Why it behaves this way

Explanation

Torque tells you how strongly a force tries to rotate an object about a pivot. It depends on both where the force is applied and how much of the force points perpendicular to the bar.

This bench keeps the bar and rotational inertia fixed so you can isolate the geometry of torque. Change the distance from the pivot, force size, or force angle relative to the bar, then compare the stage with the moment arm, line of action, and graphs. For one fixed setup, the torque stays constant, so the torque graph is flat while angular speed and rotation angle build up.

Key ideas

01Read torque as : a longer distance from the pivot or a larger perpendicular component gives a larger turning effect.
02A force can be large and still produce almost no torque if its line of action passes through the pivot, because the moment arm is then near zero.
03On this bench, a fixed setup gives constant torque, so angular acceleration is constant, angular speed changes linearly, and rotation angle curves.

Worked examples

Solve the live torque

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Frozen walkthrough

Step through the frozen example

Frozen walkthrough
Start from the geometry you can see. First calculate torque from distance and the perpendicular component of the force. Then use the same constant-torque setup to find angular speed and rotation angle at a chosen time.

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Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesUsing frozen parameters

For the current setup, what torque does the force create and what angular acceleration follows on this fixed-inertia bench?

Distance from pivot

1.6 m

Force magnitude

2 N

Angle relative to the bar

90 °

1. Write the torque relation

Use and then . On this bench the rotational inertia stays fixed at .

2. Find the perpendicular force component

With , , and , the perpendicular part is .

3. Calculate torque and angular acceleration

So and .

Torque and angular acceleration

The perpendicular part of the push is positive here, so the same force geometry builds a counterclockwise twist.

Quick test

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