Angular momentum (classical)

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In physics, angular momentum is a kinematic property of a system consisting of one or more point masses. Its importance derives from the fact that it is conserved in several physical circumstances. (Recall that a conserved property of a system is one that does not change over time.)

Point mass m with velocity v has angular momentum Lm r × v with respect to O. L is a vector pointing towards the reader

The angular momentum of a single point mass m is defined with respect to a point O. Denote the vector from O to m by r (see the figure). Let the mass have velocity v, then the angular momentum L of the point mass is defined as the cross product,

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \mathbf{L} \equiv m \mathbf{r}\times \mathbf{v} = \mathbf{r}\times \mathbf{p}. }

It follows from the definition of cross product that the vector L is perpendicular to the plane of the figure and points towards the reader. Note that the definition pm v for the linear momentum is introduced here.

The definition of the angular momentum of a system of n point masses is the following simple generalization:

Conservation of angular momentum

For simplicity we consider the case of one point mass, generalization to n point masses is straightforward. The following important result will be proved: a particle that moves in a centrally symmetric potential has a conserved angular momentum.

Using Newton's dot (fluxion) notation for time derivatives, we find

Use

where we invoked Newton's second law Hence the time derivative of the angular momentum is equal to the torque N,

It follows that the angular momentum is conserved—i.e., its time derivative is zero—if the applied torque N is zero, which means that either F is zero, or r and F are parallel, because in that case the cross product vanishes.

The former case occurs when the mass moves uniformly in homogeneous space (no external forces). Then also the linear momentum of the point mass is conserved, and therefore one rarely considers the angular momentum in the case of uniform rectilinear motion.

The second case is more interesting. Let us assume that F is conservative, i.e., its curl vanishes, then F is the gradient of a potential V(x,y,z),

so that for a conservative force the time derivative of L is

The quantity in brackets is known in group theory as a Lie derivative of the full rotation group SO(3). In quantum mechanics it is a well-known operator, namely the orbital angular momentum operator (except for the factor ).

From the general properties of Lie derivatives—or equivalently orbital angular momenta—it follows that the time derivative of L vanishes whenever the potential V(x,y,z) is rotationally invariant (isotropic, central-symmetric). This means that the function V(x,y,z) depends on r only, when expressed in spherical polar coordinates (r, θ, φ). By expressing the gradient in spherical polar coordinates and writing the cross product as a determinant, we can prove this explicitly, using that the derivatives of V with respect to θ and φ are zero,

A well-known example is the motion of the earth around the sun. To a very good approximation the gravitation is central-symmetric (rotationally invariant) and hence the earth's orbit is characterized by a conserved angular momentum. Kepler's second law is a direct consequence of this conservation of angular momentum.

Separation of center of mass

The angular momentum of a system of point masses with respect to an arbitrary point O can be separated into two terms. The first term is the angular momentum with respect to O of a particle with total mass M positioned at the center of mass C of the system. The other term is the sum of the angular momenta of the particles with respect to C.

The center of mass C is determined by

Introduce s i for particle i at point P i

Note that

and hence also

Now,

where the two cross terms vanished and the two diagonal terms are non-vanishing. The two remaining terms are:

If the total system moves in homogeneous (field free) space, the first term is conserved and is usually not of much interest. The second term, the sum of the angular momenta of the n particles with respect to the center of mass, is usually designated the total angular momentum of the system,

where the position vectors s i are defined with respect to a system of axes with origin in the center of mass C of the system.

Circular motion around a fixed axis

A system often encountered in physics is a particle (point mass) that moves along a circle in a fixed plane. Let us choose a system of axes such that the plane of motion is the x-y plane, with the z-axis perpendicular to the plane. The coordinates of the particle and its time derivative are

where we used that the radius r of the circle is time-independent. The angular momentum is given by

The quantity mr 2 is the inertia moment I of the present simple system (particle on a circle) and ω is the angular velocity. The angular velocity, as defined here, is a scalar. Often the product ωez is defined as angular velocity ω, which is a vector.

In summary, for a particle moving on a circle around a fixed axis, the angular momentum is proportional to the angular velocity with the inertia moment as proportionality factor,

Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \mathbf{L} = I \boldsymbol{\omega}. }

It is of some interest to point out that this simple relation becomes a vector-tensor relation for more general motions of more general systems (rigid rotors) for which the rotational axis is not fixed in space: L and ω remain vectors, but the inertia moment generalizes to a second rank, symmetric, tensor.