Starter track
Step 5 of 50 / 5 completeRotational Mechanics
Earlier steps still set up Angular Momentum.
Previous step: Rolling Motion.
Concept module
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.
Interactive lab
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 5 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Angular Momentum.
Previous step: Rolling Motion.
Why it behaves this way
Angular momentum is the rotational analogue of linear momentum. Linear momentum keeps track of how hard it is to change straight-line motion with ; angular momentum keeps track of rotational motion with .
This bench stays bounded on purpose. The same six equal masses rotate about one axis while you change only the mass radius and the angular speed. That makes the two ingredients of angular momentum visible without drifting into a giant rigid-body or orbital-mechanics system.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans0.55 m
2.4 rad/s
6 kg
1. Build the current inertia
2. Insert the live radius
3. Multiply by the live spin rate
Current moment of inertia and angular momentum
Conservation checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
A faster-spinning object always has 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.
If you hold angular speed fixed while moving mass outward, the angular momentum increases because the moment of inertia increased. That is not conservation; it means some external torque or work must have changed the state.
Quick test
Compare cases
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
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 rotational direction.
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 linked readout and graphs report moment of inertia, angular momentum, rim speed, and the same-L spin response on the same bench.
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-layout same-L setups sweep out less angle over 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.
Carry rotational momentum forward
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Watch two carts trade momentum through one bounded internal interaction and see the total stay fixed while the individual momenta, velocities, and center-of-mass motion update together.
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.
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.