Telemachus
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Hi there. I need help to work this out.
A particle with mass m is studied over a rotating reference frame, which rotates along the OZ axis with angular velocity \dot\phi=\omega, directed along OZ. It is possible to prove that the potential (due to inertial forces) can be written as:
V=\omega \cdot L-\frac{1}{2}m(\omega\times r)^2
L denotes the angular momentum round the origin O. Determine:
a) The generalized moment taking as generalized coordinates the cartesian coordinates (X,Y,Z) taken over the rotating system.
b) The generalized moment taking as generalized coordinates the cylindrical coordinates (\rho,\phi,Z) taken over the rotating system.
c) Use the corresponding Legendre transformation, assuming there are no additional forces to find the Hamiltonian. Demonstrate that the Hamiltonian is:
H=H_0-\omega \cdot L
Where H0 is the hamiltonian for a free particle.
Excuse my english :P
I don't know how to start. I've tried making a transform from x', y',z' inertial coordinates, using a rotation. Let's say:
x'=X \cos\phi-Ysin\phi
y'=Y\cos\phi+X\sin\phi
z'=Z
Should I just use this transformation to get the kinetic energy and then just set L=T-V?
Thanks for your help :)
A particle with mass m is studied over a rotating reference frame, which rotates along the OZ axis with angular velocity \dot\phi=\omega, directed along OZ. It is possible to prove that the potential (due to inertial forces) can be written as:
V=\omega \cdot L-\frac{1}{2}m(\omega\times r)^2
L denotes the angular momentum round the origin O. Determine:
a) The generalized moment taking as generalized coordinates the cartesian coordinates (X,Y,Z) taken over the rotating system.
b) The generalized moment taking as generalized coordinates the cylindrical coordinates (\rho,\phi,Z) taken over the rotating system.
c) Use the corresponding Legendre transformation, assuming there are no additional forces to find the Hamiltonian. Demonstrate that the Hamiltonian is:
H=H_0-\omega \cdot L
Where H0 is the hamiltonian for a free particle.
Excuse my english :P
I don't know how to start. I've tried making a transform from x', y',z' inertial coordinates, using a rotation. Let's say:
x'=X \cos\phi-Ysin\phi
y'=Y\cos\phi+X\sin\phi
z'=Z
Should I just use this transformation to get the kinetic energy and then just set L=T-V?
Thanks for your help :)