The centre of mass of a rectangular lamina lies at the point of intersection of its diagonals.
centroid
yes Eg. In a circular ring
No the centre of mass of a solid object not necessarily lie within the object because solid object is not in a symmetric shape and not equaly distribute
Not necessarily. Think of a wedding ring or a motor helmet.
The center of gravity of a solid body does not always lie within the body. An example of this is a hula hoop. The center of gravity does not lie on the hoop that rotates.
centroid
no]
lamina propriaThe capillaries that nourish the epithelium and absorb digested nutrients lie in the lamina propria. The lamina propria is a layer of connective tissue that is under the basement membrane lining a layer of epithelium.lamina propria
The center is at the midpoint; 1/2 Distance between them.
yes Eg. In a circular ring
The position of the specific point of center of mass is the point at which the object could be modeled to have all of its mass acting for all intensive purposes.
The center of gravity always lies within an object, and is the location at which the entire mass can be considered acting at a single point.For a system of more than one object, the center of gravity can lie anywhere between the farthest points of the objects, depending on the distribution of mass. The center of mass is called the barycenter.
The simplest answer is to look at it this way. Take a circular piece of steel (not a flat disk but a rod formed into a circle). The center of mass will be in the center of the circle, which is not within the body of the steel.
No the centre of mass of a solid object not necessarily lie within the object because solid object is not in a symmetric shape and not equaly distribute
halfway between two objects .
Balance and stability. The centre of mass of an object must lie within the area of the object's base otherwise the object is unstable.
Not necessarily. Think of a wedding ring or a motor helmet.