JEE Main Rotational Motion 2027 u2014 Moment of Inertia, Torque, Rolling and Practice Problems - JEE Gurukul

JEE Main Rotational Motion 2027 u2014 Moment of Inertia, Torque, Rolling and Practice Problems

JEE Main Advanced engineering physics chemistry math study cover 11

Rotational Motion (Class 11, Chapter 7 u2014 Systems of Particles and Rotational Motion) is one of the most important and frequently tested chapters in JEE Main and JEE Advanced Physics, contributing 2u20133 questions per paper. This guide covers moment of inertia, torque, angular momentum, rolling motion, and the key theorems you need to master for JEE 2027.

JEE Rotational Motion u2014 Weightage

Parameter JEE Main JEE Advanced
Avg. Questions 2u20133 3u20135
Difficulty Medium High
Class 11 (Chapter 7) 11 + extension
Marks potential 8u201312 12u201320

Key Formulas u2014 Rotational Motion

Quantity Formula Linear Analogue
Angular velocity u03c9 = du03b8/dt v = dx/dt
Angular acceleration u03b1 = du03c9/dt a = dv/dt
Torque u03c4 = r u00d7 F = Iu03b1 F = ma
Angular Momentum L = Iu03c9 = r u00d7 p p = mv
Rotational KE KE = u00bdIu03c9u00b2 KE = u00bdmvu00b2
Work by torque W = u03c4u00b7u03b8 W = Fu00b7d

Moment of Inertia u2014 Standard Results (Must Memorise)

Body Axis I
Thin rod (length L) Centre, perpendicular MLu00b2/12
Thin rod (length L) End, perpendicular MLu00b2/3
Solid cylinder/disc (radius R) Geometric axis MRu00b2/2
Hollow cylinder/ring (radius R) Geometric axis MRu00b2
Solid sphere (radius R) Diameter 2MRu00b2/5
Hollow sphere (radius R) Diameter 2MRu00b2/3
Disc (radius R) Diameter MRu00b2/4

Parallel Axis Theorem and Perpendicular Axis Theorem

Parallel Axis Theorem

I = I_cm + Mdu00b2

I about any axis = I about parallel axis through CM + Mdu00b2, where d = distance between axes.

Perpendicular Axis Theorem (Laminar bodies only)

I_z = I_x + I_y

For flat (laminar) objects: MOI about axis perpendicular to plane = sum of MOI about two mutually perpendicular axes in the plane.

Conservation of Angular Momentum

When external torque = 0: L = Iu03c9 = constant

Classic examples:

  • Skater pulling arms in u2192 I decreases u2192 u03c9 increases (L constant)
  • Diver tucking u2192 I decreases u2192 rotates faster
  • Earth’s orbit u2014 angular momentum conserved (Kepler’s 2nd law)

Rolling Motion u2014 JEE Favourite

For rolling without slipping: v = u03c9r (velocity of CM = angular velocity u00d7 radius)

Total KE = Translational KE + Rotational KE = u00bdmvu00b2 + u00bdIu03c9u00b2

Comparing Rolling Objects Down an Incline

Object I/MRu00b2 Acceleration (a) Reaches Bottom
Solid Sphere 2/5 5g sinu03b8/7 First
Solid Cylinder 1/2 2g sinu03b8/3 Second
Hollow Sphere 2/3 3g sinu03b8/5 Third
Ring/Hollow Cylinder 1 g sinu03b8/2 Last

Tip: Lower MOI u2192 higher acceleration u2192 reaches bottom first. Solid sphere always wins the race!

Practice Quiz u2014 Rotational Motion JEE 2027

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FAQ

How to approach Rotational Motion in JEE Main?

Start with the linear-rotational analogy table u2014 every linear concept has a rotational equivalent. Memorise the 6 standard MOI formulas cold. Then practice rolling motion problems (most common in JEE Main). Torque + angular momentum conservation problems appear in JEE Advanced.

Is Rotational Motion in JEE Advanced more difficult?

Yes. JEE Advanced tests rotational motion with multi-concept problems involving friction, torque, and energy simultaneously. Typical problems include a cylinder rolling on a rough incline, a rod falling from vertical, and systems with multiple rotating bodies. Practice 50+ problems after mastering concepts.

Practise JEE Physics daily at JEE Gurukul. Take a Free JEE Mock Test. See JEE Main Weightage Guide.

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