Starter track
Step 4 of 50 / 5 completeRotational Mechanics
Earlier steps still set up Rolling Motion.
Previous step: Rotational Inertia / Moment of Inertia.
Concept module
Roll a sphere, cylinder, hoop, or custom mass distribution down one incline and see how rolling without slipping ties translation, rotation, and rotational inertia to the same honest run.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 4 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Rolling Motion.
Previous step: Rotational Inertia / Moment of Inertia.
Why it behaves this way
Rolling without slipping ties translational motion and rotational motion to the same live state. The center of mass speeds up down the incline while the object also spins fast enough to keep the contact point from sliding.
This bench stays bounded on purpose. One rigid roller moves on one incline with a no-slip constraint, so the key comparison stays honest: the same gravity component acts down the slope, while shape and mass distribution decide how strongly that motion must also build rotation.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans12 °
0.5
1. Start from the rolling-without-slipping acceleration rule
2. Insert the live slope and shape response
3. Turn acceleration into a ramp time
Current acceleration and ramp time
No-slip checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
A heavier-looking or larger-looking rolling object must always win the race down the incline.
In this bounded no-slip model the key race variable is not the total mass. It is how the mass is distributed relative to the axis, summarized here by the inertia factor .
Radius matters for angular speed and rotational bookkeeping, but for the same shape on the same incline it does not by itself change the center-of-mass acceleration formula.
Quick test
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Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one roller descending a single incline from left to right. The wheel interior changes to represent a solid sphere, solid cylinder, hoop, or custom mass distribution, while the center point and spoke lines rotate with the motion.
Optional overlays can show the no-slip relation between center speed and angular speed, a cue for the mass layout and inertia factor, an energy-split bar, and the uphill static-friction force together with the rolling torque. The readout card reports the same live time, slope, acceleration, travel time, and spin state.
Graph summary
The distance curve bends upward because the center of mass is accelerating down the incline. The no-slip speed-link graph keeps the center speed and on top of each other whenever rolling without slipping is active.
The energy graph shows translational, rotational, and total kinetic energy together. The acceleration map falls as the inertia factor rises, which is why a hoop rolls more slowly than a sphere on the same incline.
Carry rolling ideas forward
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Treat angular momentum as rotational momentum on one compact rotor where mass radius and spin rate stay tied to the same readouts, response maps, and same-L conservation story.
Track a particle moving at constant speed around a circle and connect radius, angular speed, tangential speed, centripetal acceleration, and the inward-force requirement to the same live state.
Push one cart with a timed force pulse and watch momentum, impulse, and force-time area stay tied to the same motion, readouts, and graphs.