Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Gyroscope
Gyroscope
The term "gyroscope" refers to any object mounted so that
it turns very quickly around an axis of symmetry. Many
different kinds of objects rotate or can be caused to rotate
(e.g., a top, a bicycle wheel, a figure skater, the Earth and
the other planets in the solar system, some communication
and research satellites, an umbrella, an egg).
. People have used
the properties of the gyroscope to invent a range of
guidance and stabilization systems such as those used in
aeroplanes and submarines.
c
A fundamental property of gyroscopes is
, also known as
the
.
The first thing we need to understand is the meaning of "inertia". This is a
principle which says that
(For example, the occupants of a car jerk forward
when the car comes to a sudden stop because the bodies, due to their
inertia, are still moving forward even though the car has stopped.)
When we speak of gyroscopic inertia, we are talking about
This is the tendency of all objects rotating around an axis to maintain a
fixed orientation, or direction of spin and position; that is, if there are no forces. In other
words, a rotating object tends to stay in the same position.
On Earth, spinning gyroscopes will eventually come to a stop because of air resistance and
friction. However, this will not occur in an ideal environment such as Space.
c
0
It is far easier to maintain your balance on a moving bicycle than on a motionless bicycle.
We know that a rotating object tends to stay in the same position. The faster the object
rotates, the greater its gyroscopic inertia and the more difficult it is to change its direction
of spin and position.
For example, the faster a bicycle wheel is turning, the more gyroscopic inertia it has, the
more stable the bicycle and the easier it is to maintain your balance.
The artificial horizon used by aircraft pilots is produced by a spinning gyroscope. This
instrument is extremely important to the pilot, as it shows him/her the position of the
aircraft with respect to the true horizon.
A spinning object reacts differently to an outside force than does a stationary object. If a
force is applied to a freestanding object that is not rotating, the object turns in the direction
of the applied force. However a rotating object does not start turning in the same direction
as the force applied to it. It reacts as if a force had been applied to it at some other point.
This is called precession.
Like gyroscopic inertia, precession contributes to a bicycles stability and ease of handling.
When you are riding a bicycle, you usually try to maintain your balance directly above the
point of contact with the ground, except when you want to make a turn. To turn a corner,
you lean into the turn, or the bicycle will skid. You may not have realized that the reason for
leaning is to produce precession in the wheel and make turning easier. The precession
movement turns the bicycle in the direction you are leaning (without any need to turn the
handlebars).
In other words, as you approach a right-hand turn, you lean your body and the bicycle to
the right. The precession this produces automatically turns the bicycle to the right. This
keeps you close to the curb and prevents skidding. You then simply return the bicycle to its
former vertical position -- until the next corner!