I know that the moment of inertia of a sphere is $\frac{2}{5}mr^2$ but using the perpendicular axis theorem we can get that the $I_z=I_x+I_y$ and they are all equal in case of the sphere because of its symmetry, therefore $I = I + I$ and then $I=0$! Isn't that wrong?
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Perhaps this is better asked on the physics stack exchange – SvanN Aug 28 '17 at 07:40
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The perpendicular axis theorem can be only used to determine the moment of inertia of a rigid object that lies entirely within a plane. And a sphere does not.
Emilio Novati
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