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attribution: text was copied from Explorer 1 on 27 April 2023; see that page's history for full attribution (see WP:RIA for more information) |
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[[File:tennis_racket_theorem.gif|thumb|upright=1.5|link={{filepath:tennis_racket_theorem.ogv}}|Composite video of a tennis racquet rotated around the three axes – the intermediate one flips from the light edge to the dark edge]]
[[File:Théorie Nouvelle de la Rotation des Corps.jpg|thumb|Title page of "Théorie Nouvelle de la Rotation des Corps", 1852 printing]]
The '''tennis racket theorem''' or '''intermediate axis theorem''' is a result in [[classical mechanics]] describing the movement of a [[rigid body]] with three distinct [[principal moments of inertia]].
The theorem describes the following effect: rotation of an object around its first and third [[Moment of inertia#Principal axes|principal axes]] is stable, while rotation around its second principal axis (or intermediate axis) is not.
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