Equation of Motion for 2 DOF spring damper system

ufone317
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Please guide me towards the "differential equation of motion" for the following 2 DOF Spring-damper system.

Image.jpg


And furthermore, if above system is in a uniform speed rotating frame, then what can be the effect on this system?


Thank you very much.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Please write the equation for one dof.

Does gravity g apply to y-direction?


What force must be considered in a rotating body?
 
Thank you for your reply.

m*(d2x/dt2)+c*(dx/dt)+k*x = 0 is the equation for one axis.

No effect of gravity is considered here.

The whole frame is rotating at an uniform angular velocity.

If you can provide equation for static (i-e. not rotating) case, that's also fine.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong.

Here are the motion equations;

mx'' + c1x' + k1x' = 0 (Not forced)
my'' + c2y' + k2y' = 0 (Not forced)

Suppose the frame is rotated thru angle q,

In this case, the mass center position with respect to the frame F is

Xnew = x*cos(q) - y*sin(q)
Ynew = y*cos(q) + x*sin(q)

You can simply differentiate Xnew and Ynew. Once and twice, then replace in motion equations

Xnew' = cos(q)*(x'-yq*') - sin(q)*(y'+xq*')
Xnew'' = x''*cos(q) - 2*x'*q'*sin(q) - x*q''*sin(q) - x*q'*q'*cos(q)
-y''*sin(q) - 2*y'*q'*cos(q) - y*q''*cos(q) + y*q'*q'*sin(q)

Note that q''=0. Eliminate some of the terms above and do the same thing for y-axis
 
Hello everyone, I’m considering a point charge q that oscillates harmonically about the origin along the z-axis, e.g. $$z_{q}(t)= A\sin(wt)$$ In a strongly simplified / quasi-instantaneous approximation I ignore retardation and take the electric field at the position ##r=(x,y,z)## simply to be the “Coulomb field at the charge’s instantaneous position”: $$E(r,t)=\frac{q}{4\pi\varepsilon_{0}}\frac{r-r_{q}(t)}{||r-r_{q}(t)||^{3}}$$ with $$r_{q}(t)=(0,0,z_{q}(t))$$ (I’m aware this isn’t...
Hi, I had an exam and I completely messed up a problem. Especially one part which was necessary for the rest of the problem. Basically, I have a wormhole metric: $$(ds)^2 = -(dt)^2 + (dr)^2 + (r^2 + b^2)( (d\theta)^2 + sin^2 \theta (d\phi)^2 )$$ Where ##b=1## with an orbit only in the equatorial plane. We also know from the question that the orbit must satisfy this relationship: $$\varepsilon = \frac{1}{2} (\frac{dr}{d\tau})^2 + V_{eff}(r)$$ Ultimately, I was tasked to find the initial...

Similar threads

Back
Top