Rotation with Zero Angular Momentum (The Square Cat)

​
arm length
base angle
A deformable body can rotate itself using only internal forces—without any external torque, keeping its angular momentum zero. This is the case for a cat falling from a tree and landing on its feet. The four masses at the vertices of a parallelogram in this Demonstration can also rotate with only internal forces changing the parallelogram's base angle and arm length.

Details

This Demonstration is a simulation of a very simple "cat"—a deformable body that can change its orientation using only internal forces, enabling it to rotate while its total angular momentum is zero. This model was proposed by J. E. Avron and was studied in detail in E. Putterman and O. Raz, "The Square Cat," Am. J. Phys. 76(11), 2008 pp. 1040–1044. The four masses are connected with rods of zero mass. By applying internal forces only, the user can control the length of one pair of rods
a
and the base angle
t
of the parallelogram. Starting from a given shape, changing
a
, then
t
, changing
a
to its original value, and then changing
t
to its original value, also (all changes are done while keeping the angular momentum of the body zero), leads to a net rotation of the original shape.

External Links

Angular Momentum (ScienceWorld)

Permanent Citation

Oren Raz, Eli Putterman, Yosi Avron
​
​"Rotation with Zero Angular Momentum (The Square Cat)"​
​http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/RotationWithZeroAngularMomentumTheSquareCat/​
​Wolfram Demonstrations Project​
​Published: April 27, 2009