Two precession rates for a spinning top (forced precession)

AI Thread Summary
A spinning top undergoing forced precession exhibits two distinct precession rates due to the quadratic nature of the governing equations derived from Euler's equations. The two rates correspond to different energy states, with the higher precession rate requiring significantly more energy, making it less stable. In practice, the top typically stabilizes at the lower precession rate, as any disturbances tend to shift it to this lower energy state. This behavior is analogous to a pendulum that can exist in two stable positions but prefers the one with lower energy. The discussion highlights the importance of energy considerations in determining the observed precession rate of the top.
garygary
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
When you have a spinning top undergoing forced precession (due to the torque created by its weight trying to tip it), you seem to get two precession rates. Why?

I get this result from using Euler's equations, specifically that the sum of moments tipping the top is (in the case of steady precession):

\sum M0 = \psi' sin(\theta) (I (\psi' cos(\theta) + p) - I0 \psi' cos(\theta))

Where:
\psi' = angular velocity of precession
I = mass moment of inertia of top about spin axis
I0 = mass moment of inertia of top about transverse axis
p = angular velocity of top about its spin axis, its spin
\theta = angle of precession

The only moment acting on the top is its weight, which can be written as:
mgl sin(\theta)

Where:
m = mass of top
g = gravity
l = distance from tipping axis to centre of mass of the top

This gives me the quadratic equation:

0 = (\psi')2 cos(\theta) (I - I0) + I p \psi' - lmg

Which when solved for \psi' gives two precession rates. Which one will the top actually precess at, and why? One precession rate is much smaller than the other. If instead of a top it is a cylindrical shape, with I0>I, both precession rates have the same sign. I'm having trouble working out exactly what this means in reality. So the top can precess stably at both of these precession rates? What makes it go at one rate rather than the other?

In most other examples I can find it is typically assumed that the precession rate is much less than the spin rate, so the squared term of the quadratic is ignored and you only get one answer. This answer is always closest to the larger precession rate that I find above.

This is my first post, so hopefully you can understand my technique and exactly what I'm asking, any help is greatly appreciated.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
garygary said:
When you have a spinning top undergoing forced precession (due to the torque created by its weight trying to tip it), you seem to get two precession rates. Why?

I get this result from using Euler's equations [...]


I wonder whether the two rates you are getting are for precession rate and nutation rate respectively.

Nutation rate is always faster than precession rate. As you refer to, when the spin rate is not much faster than the precession rate things get critical.

The most informative discussion of nutation that I know of is in two articles by Eugene Butikov.
http://faculty.ifmo.ru/butikov/Applets/Precession.html"
http://faculty.ifmo.ru/butikov/Applets/Gyroscope.html"

And possibly the article about http://www.cleonis.nl/physics/phys256/gyroscope_physics.php" on my own website will be helpful to you.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Cleonis said:
I wonder whether the two rates you are getting are for precession rate and nutation rate respectively.
The two rates are for steady-state precession. In other words, no nutation is present. The physics of gyroscopic precession is covered in detail in most undergrad classical mechanics texts. The reason you get two precession rates is because the equation for the steady-state precession is a quadratic.

It is usually the slow rate that is observed.
 
garygary said:
In most other examples I can find it is typically assumed that the precession rate is much less than the spin rate, so the squared term of the quadratic is ignored and you only get one answer. This answer is always closest to the larger precession rate that I find above.
Dropping the quadratic term yields the smaller precession rate, not the larger one.

Consider the quadratic equation

ax^2 - bx + c = 0,\quad a,b,c>0

This obviously has two solutions given by

x=\frac{b\pm\sqrt{b^2-4ac}}{2a} = \frac{b}{2a}\left(1\pm\sqrt{1-\frac{4ac}{b^2}}\right)

When b^2\gg 4ac, the radical can be expanded to yield two solutions,

\begin{aligned}<br /> x_+ = \frac{b}{2a}\left(1+\sqrt{1-\frac{4ac}{b^2}}\right) \approx \frac b a \\[10pt]<br /> x_- = \frac{b}{2a}\left(1-\sqrt{1-\frac{4ac}{b^2}}\right) \approx \frac c b<br /> \end{aligned}

Since b^2\gg 4ac, x_+\gg x_-.

Another way to look at this: The x_+ solution results from ignoring the constant term in the quadratic, leaving (ax-b)x = 0. The x_- solution results from ignoring that quadratic term, leaving -bx+c = 0.
 
D H said:
Dropping the quadratic term yields the smaller precession rate, not the larger one.

Yes you're right, I'd made a mistake when calculating it before. And yes, both the rates I get are definitely precession rates.

I asked one of my lecturers about this problem today, and he explained it all to me. Both precession rates exist, and the top can stably precess at either one of them. The difference is however in the energies of both states. The higher precession rate requires significantly more energy in the system, and as such it rarely exists. If it does occur, any damping will reduce its energy and it will try to switch to the lower energy state, with the slower precession rate.

If you imagine a pendulum say, it also has two stable states. The lowest energy stable state is with the pendulum pointing directly down, but it can also be stable with the pendulum perfectly balanced and pointing up. If there is any disturbance the system will try to switch from the high energy state to the lower energy state, ie; the pendulum will unbalance and try to point directly down. A similar thing occurs for the top apparently, which is why the higher precession rate rarely occurs and when it does it is short lived.
 
Thread 'Question about pressure of a liquid'
I am looking at pressure in liquids and I am testing my idea. The vertical tube is 100m, the contraption is filled with water. The vertical tube is very thin(maybe 1mm^2 cross section). The area of the base is ~100m^2. Will he top half be launched in the air if suddenly it cracked?- assuming its light enough. I want to test my idea that if I had a thin long ruber tube that I lifted up, then the pressure at "red lines" will be high and that the $force = pressure * area$ would be massive...
I feel it should be solvable we just need to find a perfect pattern, and there will be a general pattern since the forces acting are based on a single function, so..... you can't actually say it is unsolvable right? Cause imaging 3 bodies actually existed somwhere in this universe then nature isn't gonna wait till we predict it! And yea I have checked in many places that tiny changes cause large changes so it becomes chaos........ but still I just can't accept that it is impossible to solve...

Similar threads

Replies
34
Views
3K
Replies
10
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
936
Replies
7
Views
2K
Back
Top