Название: Introduction to Mechanical Vibrations
Автор: Ronald J. Anderson
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Физика
isbn: 9781119053644
isbn:
We use the general approach to differentiating vectors, as follows, where
It is important to understand that the angular velocity vector,
We start the kinematic analysis by locating a fixed point, in this case point
(1.2)
The absolute velocity of
(1.3)
Then, using Equation 1.1 and recognizing that
(1.4)
which can be simplified to
The absolute acceleration of
(1.6)
which simplifies to
(1.7)
Once an expression for the absolute acceleration has been found, the kinematic analysis is complete and we move on to drawing a Free Body Diagram (FBD). For this example, the FBD is shown in Figure 1.2.
Figure 1.2 Free Body Diagram of a bead on a wire.
Constraints are taken into account when showing the forces acting on the bead. The forces shown and the rationale behind them are:
= the weight of the body acting vertically downward. This is the effect of gravity.
= one component of the normal force that the wire transmits to the mass. Since is perpendicular to the plane of the wire, there can be a normal force in that direction.
= the other component of the normal force. We let it have an unknown magnitude and align it with the radial direction since that direction is normal to the wire.
Note that there is no friction force because the system is frictionless. If there were, we would need to show a friction force acting in the direction that is tangential to the wire.
Once the FBD is complete, we can proceed to write Newton's Equations of Motion by simply summing forces in the positive coordinate directions and letting them equal the mass multiplied by the absolute acceleration in that direction. The result is three scalar equations as follows
At this point in the majority of undergraduate Dynamics courses we would count the number of unknowns that we have in the three equations to see if there is sufficient information to solve the problem. We would find five unknowns
and say that we are unable to solve this without further information since we have only three equations. A typical textbook problem would say, for example, that the mass is released from rest (i.e.