kiertotiheys
Kiertotiheys, often translated as rotational inertia or moment of inertia, is a fundamental concept in physics that quantifies an object's resistance to changes in its rotational motion. Just as mass measures an object's resistance to linear acceleration, kiertotiheys measures its resistance to angular acceleration. It depends not only on the object's mass but also on how that mass is distributed relative to the axis of rotation. Objects with mass concentrated farther from the axis have a greater kiertotiheys.
Mathematically, kiertotiheys (denoted by the symbol I) for a collection of point masses is the sum of
Kiertotiheys is a crucial factor in understanding rotational dynamics. It appears in Newton's second law for