The math optional, made finite.

← 2025 Paper 2

UPSC Maths 2025 Paper 2 Q6c — Solution

15 marks · Section B

Question

Calculate the moment of inertia of a uniform solid cylinder of mass MM, radius RR and length LL with respect to a set of axes passing through the centre of the cylinder, where zz-axis is the axis of the cylinder and ρ\rho is the constant density at any point of the cylinder. Also find LR\dfrac{L}{R} for which the moment of inertia about xx- or yy-axis will be minimum for a given mass of the cylinder.

Technique

Integrate in cylindrical coordinates for the inertia tensor of the solid cylinder, then minimise the transverse moment under the constraint of fixed mass (hence fixed volume, since density is constant) using single-variable calculus.

Solution

Place the centre at the origin, axis along zz, so the cylinder occupies 0sR0\le s\le R, 0ϕ2π0\le\phi\le 2\pi, L/2zL/2-L/2\le z\le L/2 (use ss for the cylindrical radius). Density ρ=MπR2L\rho = \dfrac{M}{\pi R^2 L} is constant; the volume element is dV=sdsdϕdzdV = s\,ds\,d\phi\,dz.

Moment of inertia about the zz-axis (the cylinder axis)

Perpendicular distance from the zz-axis is ss:

= \rho\cdot 2\pi\cdot L\cdot\frac{R^4}{4} = \frac{\pi\rho L R^4}{2}.$$ Substituting $\rho = M/(\pi R^2 L)$: $$\boxed{I_{zz} = \tfrac12 M R^2.}$$ ### Moment of inertia about the $x$-axis (= $y$-axis by symmetry) Distance$^2$ from the $x$-axis is $y^2 + z^2$, with $y = s\sin\phi$: $$I_{xx} = \int\rho\,(y^2 + z^2)\,dV = \rho\int_0^R\!\!\int_0^{2\pi}\!\!\int_{-L/2}^{L/2}\big(s^2\sin^2\phi + z^2\big)s\,dz\,d\phi\,ds.$$ Split: - $\displaystyle\int s^2\sin^2\phi\,dV = \rho\Big(\int_0^R s^3\,ds\Big)\Big(\int_0^{2\pi}\sin^2\phi\,d\phi\Big)\Big(\int_{-L/2}^{L/2}dz\Big) = \rho\cdot\frac{R^4}{4}\cdot\pi\cdot L = \frac{\pi\rho L R^4}{4}.$ - $\displaystyle\int z^2\,dV = \rho\Big(\int_0^R s\,ds\Big)\Big(\int_0^{2\pi}d\phi\Big)\Big(\int_{-L/2}^{L/2}z^2\,dz\Big) = \rho\cdot\frac{R^2}{2}\cdot 2\pi\cdot\frac{L^3}{12} = \frac{\pi\rho R^2 L^3}{12}.$ Add and substitute $\pi\rho = M/(R^2 L)$: $$I_{xx} = \frac{\pi\rho L R^4}{4} + \frac{\pi\rho R^2 L^3}{12} = \frac{M R^2}{4} + \frac{M L^2}{12} = \frac{M}{12}\big(3R^2 + L^2\big).$$ $$\boxed{I_{xx} = I_{yy} = \frac{M}{12}\big(3R^2 + L^2\big),\qquad I_{zz} = \frac12 M R^2.}$$ (Off-diagonal products of inertia vanish by symmetry, so these are the principal moments.) ### Minimising $I_{xx}$ for given mass "For a given mass" with constant density means the **volume is fixed**: $V = \pi R^2 L = \text{const}$. So $R^2 = \dfrac{V}{\pi L}$. Substitute into $I_{xx}$: $$I_{xx}(L) = \frac{M}{12}\left(\frac{3V}{\pi L} + L^2\right).$$ Differentiate w.r.t. $L$ and set to zero: $$\frac{dI_{xx}}{dL} = \frac{M}{12}\left(-\frac{3V}{\pi L^2} + 2L\right) = 0 \implies 2L = \frac{3V}{\pi L^2} \implies L^3 = \frac{3V}{2\pi}.$$ The second derivative $\dfrac{M}{12}\big(\tfrac{6V}{\pi L^3} + 2\big) > 0$, so this is a minimum. Now $V = \pi R^2 L$, so $\dfrac{V}{\pi} = R^2 L$, giving $L^3 = \dfrac{3R^2 L}{2}$, i.e. $$L^2 = \frac{3}{2}R^2 \implies \frac{L}{R} = \sqrt{\frac{3}{2}} = \frac{\sqrt{6}}{2} \approx 1.2247.$$ $$\boxed{\dfrac{L}{R} = \sqrt{\dfrac{3}{2}} = \dfrac{\sqrt6}{2}.}$$ ## Answer $I_{zz} = \tfrac12 MR^2$; $\;I_{xx} = I_{yy} = \tfrac{M}{12}(3R^2 + L^2)$. The transverse moment is minimised (for fixed mass/volume) when $\dfrac{L}{R} = \sqrt{3/2} = \dfrac{\sqrt6}{2}$.

We've mapped all 13 years of this exam. Get new solutions, tools, and guides as we release them — free.