Modeling Building Response to Earthquakes: ODE Approach

  • Thread starter Thread starter aquabug918
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Building
aquabug918
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
Hey, this isn't a homework question but is more for help with a project. For our D.E. class we decided to model a building while it is being impacted by an earthquake. We are going to make up a building to use. Anyway, we are having trouble relating the earthquake to the building. We know that it has something to do with the resonate frequency of the building. Basically, we just need an equation and a solution (it has to be an ode). We are allowed to exclude variables as long as we explain why. Any suggestions? Thank you!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You can model vibrations using a spring and a damper. If you call the building your mass, take the spring as your foundation or steel memebrs, use the ground or air as your damper and your forcing function on the RHS would be a trigonometric function such as sin or cos. In order to get a solution, you will need to use MUC or VOP, or a Laplace transform. also remember, if you want a constinuous steady state vibration, then you don't need a damper. If you want to see resonance, you need to play around with paramaters until you have an increasing amplitude over time.
 
Standard second-order mass-spring-stiffness equation is the way forward - periodic forcing as above.

You could also include effects such as nonlinear damping.
 
Are there any good visualization tutorials, written or video, that show graphically how separation of variables works? I particularly have the time-independent Schrodinger Equation in mind. There are hundreds of demonstrations out there which essentially distill to copies of one another. However I am trying to visualize in my mind how this process looks graphically - for example plotting t on one axis and x on the other for f(x,t). I have seen other good visual representations of...
Back
Top