David,
Polar moment of inertia is just the inertia of the object about its constrained axis. Looking at your values I would guess that the part is a thick disc. If the part is rotating about the Y axis, then the polar moment of inertia is 340.76463 lb-in^2. If the axis of rotation isn't about one of the _PRT0001 csys axes, then make a new csys and measure relative to that csys.
Sometimes the polar moment of inertia refers to the maximum moment of inertia. If this is what you want, just take the I3 value, which happens to be the same as the inertia about the y-axis for this case. The rotation matrix will give the directions of the principal axes of inertia, row 1 = Max. Prin. Inertia, row2= Mid Prin. Inertia & row3= Min. Prin. Inertia.
Regards,
Rod
Rod Giles
Senior Design Engineer
[cid:235285807@17082010-0DDF]