What is the meaning of nonholonomy in a system?

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Nonholonomy in mechanical systems refers to constraints that cannot be expressed solely in terms of coordinates, making the system's behavior more complex. In contrast, holonomic systems have constraints based only on coordinates, simplifying analysis. A common example of a non-holonomic system is a ball rolling on a plane without slipping, where velocity factors complicate the dynamics. For a deeper understanding, Goldstein's textbook on classical mechanics is recommended, particularly section 1.3, which explains these concepts in detail. This foundational knowledge is essential for controlling spherical robots effectively.
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I keep coming across this term and I cannot understand what this means pertaining to a mechanical system. I'm working on spherical robots and their control and there is mention of nonholonomy in the control of spherical robots. I googled it but I couldn't find a clear starting point to start reading. Someone point me to the fundamentals or something from where this starts?
 
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If I remember correctly, it has to do with the kind of constraints the system has. If the constraints are functions of coordinates only, the system is holonomic. This usually means the system is "simple" to analyze (mass point on a circle).

If the constraints cannot be expressed via coordinates only, but are functions of velocity or even worse, the system is non-holonomic. Then we expect the system to behave in am more complex way. (ball rolling on plane surface without slipping).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holonomic_constraints
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonholonomic
 
Jano L. said:
If I remember correctly, it has to do with the kind of constraints the system has. If the constraints are functions of coordinates only, the system is holonomic. This usually means the system is "simple" to analyze (mass point on a circle).

If the constraints cannot be expressed via coordinates only, but are functions of velocity or even worse, the system is non-holonomic. Then we expect the system to behave in am more complex way. (ball rolling on plane surface without slipping).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holonomic_constraints
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonholonomic

yeah..but I need to understand this fully and properly. I read the wiki page and like all wiki pages it's qualitative at best. I was hoping for some book or topic which covers this extensively. But why is a ball on a plane complex? I don't understand that all.
 
But why is a ball on a plane complex? I don't understand that all.
Because non-holonomic constraint cannot be removed by coordinate transformation and elimination of the constraint variable. To see the details, try to get Goldstein's textbook, sec. 1.3 - he explains this nicely.
 
Jano L. said:
Because non-holonomic constraint cannot be removed by coordinate transformation and elimination of the constraint variable. To see the details, try to get Goldstein's textbook, sec. 1.3 - he explains this nicely.

Thank you. That is exactly what I was looking for.
 
indianaronald said:
Thank you. That is exactly what I was looking for.

what is the book called?
 
Kidphysics said:
what is the book called?

classical mechanics by Goldstein. Google it. It's available on scribd.
 
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