Rotational Power

Calculate rotational power, torque, or angular velocity including RPM and horsepower conversions.

rotational power formulas and interpretation

Rotational power is the rate at which torque transfers mechanical energy at a given rotation speed.

The calculator preserves direct solutions for power, torque, and rotational speed.

How to use the rotational power calculator

  1. Choose a model: Select the physical relationship that matches the known values.
  2. Choose the unknown: Select the quantity you need to calculate.
  3. Enter values and units: Provide every requested measurement using consistent units.
  4. Calculate: Check the formula, converted result, sign, and units.

Formula and variables

Rotational power equals torque multiplied by angular velocity in radians per second.

P = τω
PPower
Mechanical energy transfer rate (W)
τTorque
Turning moment (N·m)
ωAngular velocity
Rotation rate (rad/s)

Motor power example

A motor produces 50 N·m at 100 rad/s.

Torque
50 N·m
Angular velocity
100 rad/s
  1. P = 50 × 100
  2. P = 5,000 W

Result: Rotational power is 5 kW.

The shaft transfers mechanical energy at 5,000 joules per second.

Understanding your results

Interpreting the result

At fixed torque, power rises in direct proportion to rotational speed.

A sign indicates direction only when a consistent rotational sign convention is used.

Assumptions

  • Rotation is evaluated about a specified axis.
  • Inputs are converted through coherent SI units.
  • The selected formula adequately represents the physical system.

Limitations

  • The calculator does not simulate time-varying inputs.
  • Vector directions and multiple axes must be resolved separately.
  • Losses such as friction are not added unless represented in the entered net value.

Common mistakes

  • Mixing RPM with radians per second.
  • Using diameter instead of radius.
  • Entering a zero divisor.
  • Ignoring the direction represented by a negative value.

Practical use cases

Physics and education

Check rotational kinematics and dynamics exercises.

Machines and mechanisms

Estimate quantities for wheels, shafts, rotors, and rotating equipment.

Frequently asked questions

Why are radians used in rotational formulas?

Radians make angular and linear relationships dimensionally coherent without an extra conversion factor.

Can the result be negative?

Yes. A negative value means the quantity points opposite the direction chosen as positive.

Sources and review

Reviewed 2026-07-11.

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