Physics, asked by Xiphodon, 5 months ago

What is the SI unit of measuring inertia ???
What is the difference between moment of inertia and inertia ???
are the SI units different of each of them ???

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

SI unit of inertial is kg m/s. ... It greatly depends upon the mass of the object and the momentum of the particular body

Inertia is the resistance to acceleration (i.e. mass). Moment of Inertia is the resistance to angular acceleration (i.e. distribution of mass). Inertia is more of a linear property of mass describing how much an object resists a change in motion from a force or equivalently how massive it is.

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Answered by muskanjangde861
0

Explanation:

The unit of moment of inertia is a composite unit of measure. In the International System (SI), m is expressed in kilograms and r in metres, with I (moment of inertia) having the dimension kilogram-metre square.

It depends upon three forces - mass of the object, the shape and the relative point of rotation. It is represented by the symbol I. One can also define moment of inertia as the ability to resist a twisting force or torque.

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