# What happens to a rotating rod that breaks in two?

I know that the approximation for the moment of inertia of an infinitely thin rod of mass $m$ and length $L$ spinning around an axis perpendicular to its own axis at its center is $\frac{mL^2}{3}$:

What happens when this rod is instantaneously broken in the middle with no loss or gain of energy? Rather than some external event triggering the breakage, imagine some sort of latch that held it together before, and now it is simply released. Easier to pretend with than an infinitely thin rod with mass, at any rate.

I'd like to know how I should determine the motion (absent gravity) of the two halves. Suppose I view the scene from directly above (viewing in the same the direction as the axis of rotation), the rod is rotating clockwise from that perspective (viewing from below, in the picture above), and the event occurs when the rod is vertically aligned from that view. Based on this I assume a coordinate system: The rod was rotating within the x-y plane with its center at the origin. The axis of rotation is the positive z axis. My camera is pointing in the positive z axis from some position $(0,0,-z)$.

The top half of the rod travels to the right. Its center of mass is at its middle point, which is at position $(0,\frac{L}{4},0)$ at $t=0$. The bottom half is going to travel to the left, in a symmetrical fashion.

What are their angular velocities? Do they spin faster or slower, or at the same speed as the original rod?

The length has halved, which means the moment of inertia has been quartered. But conservation of angular momentum states each rod carries half of the rotational energy (is this correct application of conservation of angular momentum? Is there such a thing as conservation of rotational kinetic energy?) Is part of the original angular kinetic energy now split between resultant angular kinetic energy and linear kinetic energy? It seems so, because the original rod had zero linear kinetic energy (and momentum) but after breaking, the parts now both have linear kinetic energy since they are flying apart.

At this point I'm almost positive I can stumble my way to the solution for the split happening exactly at the middle. How might things change if the split is for example 1/10th of the way down the rod? Surely the little piece would go off much faster but would it spin at the same rate also?

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Thanks for editing tags and title. Much better. :) –  Steven Lu Dec 6 '11 at 2:16
Be careful with angular momentum - I think you're trying to get to the angular velocities of the fragments with respect to their centers of mass, but your original angular momentum is with respect to the center of the original rod. And conservation of angular momentum means just that: conservation of angular momentum (not energy) with respect to a given center. –  Jefromi Dec 6 '11 at 3:08