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contributor authorRoger F. Gans
date accessioned2017-05-08T23:37:32Z
date available2017-05-08T23:37:32Z
date copyrightJune, 1992
date issued1992
identifier issn0021-8936
identifier otherJAMCAV-26340#425_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/109727
description abstractThis paper presents a finite element model of the elastica, without dissipation, in a form realizable in the laboratory: a set of rigid links connected by torsion springs. The model is shown to reproduce the linear elastic behavior of beams. The linear beam, and most nonlinear beams are not periodic. (The linear eigenfrequencies are incommensurate.) They do exhibit a basic cyclic behavior, the beam waving back and forth with a measurable period. Extensive exploration of the behavior of a fourlink model reveals windows of periodicity—isolated points in parameter space where the motion is nearly periodic. (The basic phase plane diagrams are asymmetric, and the time evolution of the motion distributes this asymmetry symmetrically in time.) The first such window shows a period twice the basic cycle time, the next, less well observed one, four times the basic cycle time.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleOn the Dynamics of a Conservative Elastic Pendulum
typeJournal Paper
journal volume59
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Applied Mechanics
identifier doi10.1115/1.2899537
journal fristpage425
journal lastpage430
identifier eissn1528-9036
keywordsDynamics (Mechanics)
keywordsPendulums
keywordsCycles
keywordsMotion
keywordsEnergy dissipation
keywordsTorsion
keywordsElasticity
keywordsFinite element model AND Springs
treeJournal of Applied Mechanics:;1992:;volume( 059 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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