karen_lorr said:
Summary:: Is tension altered by the shape of the cable?
I seem to remember from my school days that Tension Force can only be linear.
Is this true?
In 1 (in the graphic) the tension will follow the line of the rope
In 2 there is an unbendable, unbreakable, steel cable formed into an arch.
a ] In 3 which direction will the Tension be?
b ] In 3 if there was a gauge on this arch would it still read 1000kn, the same as on the rope, or would the shape change this.
Thank you
I may be wrong, but this is how I see it:
Non-linear tension force is not possible.
Tension, as well as compression force, is considered a vector, which represents a physical quantity that has both magnitude and direction.
I believe that you are asking about whether or not the internal forces of the arc follow a curvilinear path.
For the external forces at the points of connection car-arc-car, we can consider those hinges or articulations, upon which only the reactive horizontal forces opposing the car's thrust and the reactive vertical forces opposing the weight of the arc (all linear forces) act.
If you disconnect that arc from the cars, still imaginarily adding those four linear forces to both ends or connecting points, you could cut that arc section by section and calculate the internal forces acting on each little section.
Then, you will see that a combination of new shearing and bending forces appear, which are a result of the action of those four external forces on the geometry of the arc (which introduces strong moments).
Even example #1 is ideal, since a horizontal rope has some weight, which makes it take the shape of a catenary (curve close to the shape of your cable, but inverted).
Because of that, each infinitesimal section of that rope will "feel" tension forces in alignment with the longitudinal axis of that section plus a force that pulls it sideways, which induces shear stress.
There are no moments in that case, since the rope is flexible, unlike your rigid arc.
