Can a Mass Suspended by Springs in a Box Exhibit Chaotic Behavior?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the potential for a mass suspended by springs within a box to exhibit chaotic behavior. Participants explore the conditions under which such behavior might arise, including the definitions of chaos and the characteristics of the system involved.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes a setup involving a mass suspended from springs attached to the walls of a box and questions the minimum number of springs required for chaotic behavior.
  • Another participant emphasizes the need for a clear mathematical definition of "chaotic response" to advance the discussion.
  • Some participants argue that if the springs are Hookean, the motion may not be chaotic, while others suggest that aperiodic motion could still occur.
  • A participant mentions that independent oscillation in the x and y directions could lead to quasiperiodic motion rather than chaos, depending on the relationship between angular frequencies.
  • There is a discussion about the sensitivity of the system to initial conditions and whether this could indicate chaotic behavior.
  • One participant notes that coupled Hookean oscillators are not chaotic but can exhibit non-periodic motion.
  • A participant introduces the idea that if the spring pivot can rotate, it may couple x and y motions in a complex manner, potentially leading to chaotic behavior in simulations.
  • Another participant references a simulation that includes gravity, suggesting that the absence of gravity might affect the chaotic nature of the system.
  • A link to a known case of mass and springs is provided, indicating that the behavior of such systems is well documented.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the definition of chaos and whether the described system can exhibit chaotic behavior. There is no consensus on the conditions necessary for chaos, and multiple competing interpretations of the system's dynamics are present.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the importance of mathematical rigor in defining chaos and the potential limitations of their discussions, particularly regarding the assumptions about spring behavior and the effects of gravity.

houlahound
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I have never seen a problem as such;

A mass in the isocentre of a box. The springs are identical unstretched length, they are attached to the walls maximally distant from each other.

The mass is suspended from springs attached to the walls of the box.What is the least number of springs to have a chaotic response of the mass?

No reason why here, just thinking of building something like this to see what happens. I think it would be cool to watch and then use odd numbers of different springs, attachment points etc.
 
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.Ffirst one should define what "chaotic response" is. I mean mathematical definition, not bla-bla-bla
 
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zwierz said:
Ffirst one should define what "chaotic response" is. I mean mathematical definition, not bla-bla-bla

So tell us what you think the mathematical definition is .
 
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I don't think the motion will be anything you'd call chaotic if the springs are Hookean.
 
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Nidum said:
So tell us what you think the mathematical definition is .
for which purpose? in dynamical systems the standards of mathematical rigor are very well known by mathematical community. If such a question arises then it is early to study dynamical chaos and one should take a course of math.analysis first
 
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I just mean aperiodic motion of the mass. May not be technical chaos.
 
houlahound said:
I just mean aperiodic motion of the mass. May not be technical chaos.

Even a mass that oscillates independently in the x and y directions (i.e. the potential energy is of the form ##\frac{1}{2}k_x x^2 + \frac{1}{2}k_y y^2## with no cross terms) moves only quasiperiodically if the two angular frequencies ##\sqrt{\frac{k_i}{m}}## are incommensurable real numbers. But this is not what chaos means.
 
K, then repeating same starting conditions would lead to different trajectories?

ie; the system would be so sensitive to starting conditions repeatability would be lost - chaotic?
 
houlahound said:
K, then repeating same starting conditions would lead to different trajectories?

ie; the system would be so sensitive to starting conditions repeatability would be lost - chaotic?

That doesn't have anything to do with periodicity or lack thereof. A system that consists of coupled Hookean oscillators is never chaotic in that sense as far as I know, but it still doesn't have to move periodically.
 
  • #10
If a single spring has a fixed resting point, then the x motion and y motion are completely separable
##H = kd^2 = k(x-x_0)^2 + k(y-y_0)^2##
But, if the spring pivot can rotate, it couples x and y in a complicated way, because there isn't a resting point ##(x_0, y_0)## but rather a resting circle ##(x-x_p)^2 + (y-y_p)^2 = r^2##

It looks fairly chaotic in a simulation.
https://www.myphysicslab.com/springs/2d-spring/2d-spring-en.html
 
  • #11
Oh, the sim also includes gravity. I guess without gravity, it isn't chaotic.
 

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