How Does Strain Affect Triangle Geometry in Tensor Analysis?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on analyzing the effects of strain on the geometry of a triangle in tensor analysis. The strain tensor provided indicates no shear strains, and the triangle is defined by points A, B, and C on different axes, with D as the midpoint of AC. In part A, the elongation of segment AC is calculated, resulting in a change of approximately 0.0354 AO. Part B explores the change in the right angle at BDA, revealing that the angle is no longer right due to the differing distances of points A' and C' after deformation. The participant seeks assistance in determining the direction cosines needed to finalize their calculations.
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Homework Statement


Strain tensor E = [0.02 0 0; 0 0.01 0; 0 0 0.03] (no shear strains).

A triangle consists of points A, B, and C, each on axis X1, X2, and X3 respectively. The lengths OA = OB = OC, and D is the midpoint of AC. The direction cosines of AC are (1/sqrt(2), 0, -1/sqrt(2)) and those of BD are (-1/sqrt(6), sqrt(2)/sqrt(3),-1/sqrt(6)). Find:

A) The elongation of AC
B) The change of initial right angle BDA

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Homework Equations



A^2 + B^2 = C^2 for right triangle

The Attempt at a Solution



Part A --

Drawing the triangle OAC (in the plane X1-X2), we see that the initial angles CAO and ACO are 45 degrees, while COA is a right angle. The deformation at point A is AO(0.02) while the deformation at point C is CO(0.03). Since AO=CO, we can write the change as:

A'C' - AC = sqrt( (1.02AO)^2 + (1.03AO)^2 ) - sqrt ( 2 AO^2 ) = 0.0354 AO

Part B --

Here I am a bit stuck. It seems to me that it should still be a right angle, but this is probably not true. I know I should have to use the direction cosines for BD. Any advice or hints?
 
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Ah, I had some insight. So the reason its not a right angle anymore is because C' is farther away from C than A' is from A. (The midpoint of AC has moved closer to C!) Still kinda lost about how to use this information though.
 
I have decided a game plan:

Try to solve cos(theta) = dot(B'D', A'C') / |B'D'|*|A'C'|

I have solved for |A'C'| already. I think I can solve for |B'D'| without much difficulty. Then I need to determine the direction cosines for B'D' and A'C'. Finally, plug in and solve.

Still fishing for help. I'm particularly confused about how to solve for the direction cosines.
 
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