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Hello. As a good mathematician, I'm having troubles reading some constants for a PDE.
I'm modelling an elastic rod using the equation
<br /> \rho A U_{tt} - N U_{xx} + E I U_{xxxx} = 0,<br />
where "\rho is the beam density, A and I are the area and moment of inertia of the beam cross section respectively, N is the prescribed axial load and E is the Young's modulus." (Nayfeh and Mook)
Now, in the literature, I've found numerical values defined as
k_{\parallel} = \frac{A E_{\parallel}}{L},
where "E_{\parallel} is the Young (stretching) modulus, A is the cross sectional area of the beam and L is the length of the beam", and
k_{\perp} = \frac{3 E_{\perp} I}{L^3}
where "E_{\perp} is the Young (bending) modulus, I is the moment of inertia of the beam cross section and L the length of the beam".
My question is the following:
How does the quantities k_{\parallel} and k_{\perp} relate to N and E I on the PDE?
I'm modelling an elastic rod using the equation
<br /> \rho A U_{tt} - N U_{xx} + E I U_{xxxx} = 0,<br />
where "\rho is the beam density, A and I are the area and moment of inertia of the beam cross section respectively, N is the prescribed axial load and E is the Young's modulus." (Nayfeh and Mook)
Now, in the literature, I've found numerical values defined as
k_{\parallel} = \frac{A E_{\parallel}}{L},
where "E_{\parallel} is the Young (stretching) modulus, A is the cross sectional area of the beam and L is the length of the beam", and
k_{\perp} = \frac{3 E_{\perp} I}{L^3}
where "E_{\perp} is the Young (bending) modulus, I is the moment of inertia of the beam cross section and L the length of the beam".
My question is the following:
How does the quantities k_{\parallel} and k_{\perp} relate to N and E I on the PDE?
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