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10.6: Radius of Gyration

  • Page ID
    70288
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    The radius of gyration is an alternate way of expressing the distribution of area away from an axis which combines the effects of the moments of inertia and cross sectional area. The radius of gyration can be thought of as the radial distance to a thin strip which has the same area and the same moment of inertia around a specific axis as the original shape. Compared to the moment of inertia, the radius of gyration is easier to visualize since it’s a distance, rather than a distance to the fourth power.

    The radius of gyration, \(k\) and the corresponding moment of inertia \(I\) are related, and both must refer to the same axis. If one is known, the other is easily found.

    The radius of gyration with respect to the \(x\) and \(y\) axes and the origin are given by these formulas

    \begin{align} k_x \amp = \sqrt{\frac{I_x}{A}} \amp k_y \amp = \sqrt{\frac{I_y}{A}} \amp k_o \amp = \sqrt{\frac{J_o}{A}}\text{.}\label{radius-of-gyration-eqn}\tag{10.6.1} \end{align}

    In engineering design, the radius of gyration is used to determine the stiffness of structural columns and estimate the critical load which will initiate column buckling.

    Question 10.6.1.

    How are \(k_x\text{,}\) \(k_y\text{,}\) and \(k_o\) related to each other?

    Answer

    \[ k_x^2 + k_y^2 = k_o^2 \nonumber \]

    Solution

    Start with (10.5.2)

    \begin{align*} J_O \amp = I_x + I_y \amp \amp \text{divide each term by }A\\ \frac{J_o}{A} \amp = \frac{I_x}{A} + \frac{I_y}{A} \amp \amp \text{apply definitions of }k^2 \\ k_o^2 \amp = k_x^2 + k_y^2 \end{align*}


    This page titled 10.6: Radius of Gyration is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Daniel W. Baker and William Haynes (Engineeringstatics) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.