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I have questions about rotation.

There is a sphere in space. I can apply a force to cause the sphere to rotate around a central axis. An infinite number of possible central axes can be drawn.

  1. Can I apply a force and then another force such that the sphere will rotate around 2 different central axes at the same time? I think yes.

  2. Is there an upper limit to how many different axes of rotation a sphere can have at the same time? Or do various axes (all axes?) somehow cancel out or add up, like linear vector addition - even though 3 different forces contributed to my linear motion the net effect on me can be expressed by a single vector.

  3. If 1 is true, and there are no external influences (whatever force got sphere rotating has stopped) will motion of the sphere change such that rotation is just around just one axis over time?

Willk
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    The sphere itself can only rotate around one axis at a time. But the axis of rotation itself can also rotate around an axis. This is called "precession". – cowlinator Sep 18 '19 at 20:25