This option is used to define rigid body rotary inertia values associated with ROTARYI elements.
It is also used in ABAQUS/Standard analyses to define mass proportional damping (for direct-integration dynamic analysis) and composite damping (for modal dynamic analysis) associated with ROTARYI elements.
Products: ABAQUS/Standard ABAQUS/Explicit
Type: Model data
Level: Part Part Instance Assembly
Set this parameter equal to the name of the element set containing the ROTARYI elements for which the value is being given.
This parameter applies only to ABAQUS/Standard analyses.
Set this parameter equal to the factor to create inertia proportional damping for the ROTARYI elements when used in direct-integration dynamics. This value is ignored in modal dynamics. The default is 0.0.
This parameter applies only to ABAQUS/Standard analyses.
Set this parameter equal to the fraction of critical damping to be used with the ROTARYI elements when calculating composite damping factors for the modes when used in modal dynamics. This value is ignored in direct-integration dynamics. The default is 0.0.
Set this parameter equal to the name of an *ORIENTATION option (Orientations, Section 2.2.5 of the ABAQUS Analysis User's Manual) that is being used to define the directions of the local axes for which the rotary inertia values are being given. If the ORIENTATION parameter is omitted, it is assumed that the components of the inertia tensor are being given with respect to the global axes; i.e., the global and local inertia axes coincide.
In large-displacement analysis (an ABAQUS/Explicit analysis or when the NLGEOM parameter is included on the *STEP option in an ABAQUS/Standard analysis), the local axes of inertia rotate with the rotation of the node to which the ROTARYI element is attached.
First (and only) line:
Rotary inertia about the local 1-axis, .
Rotary inertia about the local 2-axis, .
Rotary inertia about the local 3-axis, .
Product of inertia, .
Product of inertia, .
Product of inertia, .
The rotary inertia should be given in units of ML2. ABAQUS does not use any specific physical units, so the user's choice must be consistent.