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An inverted pendulum consists of a particle of mass m supported by a rigid massless rod of length l. The pivot O has a vertical motion given by z=Asin\omega t. Obtain the Lagrangian and find the differential equation of motion.
I'm not sure how to obtain the kinetic and potential energies. For the potential energy, would it just be
V=mglcos\theta+Asin\omega t?
And is the kinetic energy
T=\frac{1}{2}m(l^{2}\dot{\theta}^{2}+A^{2}\omega^{2}cos^{2}\omega t)?
Since the Lagrangian wouldn't be time-independent, would this in any way affect the Euler-Lagrange equation, or would it remain the same?
Thanks, all.
I'm not sure how to obtain the kinetic and potential energies. For the potential energy, would it just be
V=mglcos\theta+Asin\omega t?
And is the kinetic energy
T=\frac{1}{2}m(l^{2}\dot{\theta}^{2}+A^{2}\omega^{2}cos^{2}\omega t)?
Since the Lagrangian wouldn't be time-independent, would this in any way affect the Euler-Lagrange equation, or would it remain the same?
Thanks, all.