List of second moments of area


The following is a list of second moments of area of some shapes. The second moment of area, also known as area moment of inertia, is a geometrical property of an area which reflects how its points are distributed with respect to an arbitrary axis. The unit of dimension of the second moment of area is length to fourth power, L4, and should not be confused with the mass moment of inertia. If the piece is thin, however, the mass moment of inertia equals the area density times the area moment of inertia.

Second moments of area

Please note that for the second moment of area equations in the below table: and
DescriptionFigureSecond moment of areaComment
A filled circular area of radius ris the second polar moment of area.
An annulus of inner radius r1 and outer radius r2
For thin tubes, and and so to first order in, . So, for a thin tube, and.
is the second polar moment of area.
A filled circular sector of angle θ in radians and radius r with respect to an axis through the centroid of the sector and the center of the circleThis formula is valid only for 0 ≤ ≤
A filled semicircle with radius r with respect to a horizontal line passing through the centroid of the area
A filled semicircle as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the base: This is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem and the fact that the distance between the x axes of the previous one and this one is
A filled quarter circle with radius r with the axes passing through the bases
A filled quarter circle with radius r with the axes passing through the centroidThis is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem and the fact that the distance between these two axes is
A filled ellipse whose radius along the x-axis is a and whose radius along the y-axis is b
A filled rectangular area with a base width of b and height h
A filled rectangular area as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the baseThis is a result from the parallel axis theorem
A hollow rectangle with an inner rectangle whose width is b1 and whose height is h1
A filled triangular area with a base width of b, height h and top vertex displacement a, with respect to an axis through the centroid-
A filled triangular area as above but with respect to an axis collinear with the baseThis is a consequence of the parallel axis theorem
An equal legged angle, commonly found in engineering applicationsis the often unused "product second moment of area", used to define principal axes

Parallel axis theorem

The parallel axis theorem can be used to determine the second moment of area of a rigid body about any axis, given the body's second moment of area about a parallel axis through the body's centroid, the area of the cross section, and the perpendicular distance between the axes.