If the radius of a solid disk is doubled while keeping its mass constant, how does its moment of inertia change?

Practice Questions

1 question
Q1
If the radius of a solid disk is doubled while keeping its mass constant, how does its moment of inertia change?
  1. Increases by a factor of 2
  2. Increases by a factor of 4
  3. Remains the same
  4. Decreases by a factor of 2

Questions & Step-by-step Solutions

1 item
Q
Q: If the radius of a solid disk is doubled while keeping its mass constant, how does its moment of inertia change?
Solution: The moment of inertia of a solid disk is I = 1/2 MR^2. If R is doubled, I becomes 1/2 M(2R)^2 = 2MR^2, which is 4 times the original.
Steps: 9

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