centre of mass is nothing the mass (volume) situated at centre which is not at all use full for pt of control. but centre of gravity is that pt at which we can hold the total mass or body .
Centre of mass is a convinient point where whole mass of the body is supposed to be acting and for bodies of small shape it concides with the geometrical centre. Centre of bouancy is the centre of the immersed portion of the body inside the liquid.
Take an elemental mass on the solid hemisphere. Let the mass be in thin form of discs. The centre of mass lies at the centre of the disc. Integrate the whole function to get the c.o.m.
I would say the centre. keep in mind that the electrons are about 1/2000th the mass of a proton or neutron which are equivalent - and at the centre of the atom.
The mass remains the same.
centre of mass is nothing the mass (volume) situated at centre which is not at all use full for pt of control. but centre of gravity is that pt at which we can hold the total mass or body .
Centre of mass is a convinient point where whole mass of the body is supposed to be acting and for bodies of small shape it concides with the geometrical centre. Centre of bouancy is the centre of the immersed portion of the body inside the liquid.
An apoapsis is the point of a body's elliptical orbit around the system's centre of mass where the distance between the body and the centre of mass is at its maximum.
Centre of mass. It is where the mass appears to act.
Take an elemental mass on the solid hemisphere. Let the mass be in thin form of discs. The centre of mass lies at the centre of the disc. Integrate the whole function to get the c.o.m.
The total mass of an object may be assumed to be concentrated at its centre of mass. It used to be called the centre of gravity.
The total mass of an object may be assumed to be concentrated at its centre of mass. It used to be called the centre of gravity.
The total mass of an object may be assumed to be concentrated at its centre of mass. It used to be called the centre of gravity.
At its centre.
I would say the centre. keep in mind that the electrons are about 1/2000th the mass of a proton or neutron which are equivalent - and at the centre of the atom.
A barycentre is the point at the centre of a system - weighted according to mass or some other attribute - a term used in astronomy for the centre of mass about which a system rotates.
The mass remains the same.