ON THE STABILITY OF MACLAURIN SPHEROIDS ROTATING WITH CONSTANT ANGULAR VELOCITY

1950 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-121
Author(s):  
C. PRASAD
1972 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Sozou

Some exact solutions of the steady magnetohydrodynamic equations for a perfectly conducting inviscid self-gravitating incompressible fluid are discussed. It is shown that there exist solutions for which the free surface of the liquid is that of a planetary ellipsoid and rotates with constant angular velocity about its axis. The stability of the equilibrium configuration is not investigated.


2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-152
Author(s):  
S.F. Khizbullina

The steady flow of anomalous thermoviscous liquid between the coaxial cylinders is considered. The inner cylinder rotates at a constant angular velocity while the outer cylinder is at rest. On the basis of numerical experiment various flow regimes depending on the parameter of viscosity temperature dependence are found.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel F. Asokanthan ◽  
Soroush Arghavan ◽  
Mohamed Bognash

Effect of stochastic fluctuations in angular velocity on the stability of two degrees-of-freedom ring-type microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) gyroscopes is investigated. The governing stochastic differential equations (SDEs) are discretized using the higher-order Milstein scheme in order to numerically predict the system response assuming the fluctuations to be white noise. Simulations via Euler scheme as well as a measure of largest Lyapunov exponents (LLEs) are employed for validation purposes due to lack of similar analytical or experimental data. The response of the gyroscope under different noise fluctuation magnitudes has been computed to ascertain the stability behavior of the system. External noise that affect the gyroscope dynamic behavior typically results from environment factors and the nature of the system operation can be exerted on the system at any frequency range depending on the source. Hence, a parametric study is performed to assess the noise intensity stability threshold for a number of damping ratio values. The stability investigation predicts the form of threshold fluctuation intensity dependence on damping ratio. Under typical gyroscope operating conditions, nominal input angular velocity magnitude and mass mismatch appear to have minimal influence on system stability.


1985 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 686-692 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Month ◽  
R. H. Rand

This problem is a generalization of the classical problem of the stability of a spinning rigid body. We obtain the stability chart by using: (i) the computer algebra system MACSYMA in conjunction with a perturbation method, and (ii) numerical integration based on Floquet theory. We show that the form of the stability chart is different for each of the three cases in which the spin axis is the minimum, maximum, or middle principal moment of inertia axis. In particular, a rotation with arbitrarily small angular velocity about the maximum moment of inertia axis can be made unstable by appropriately choosing the model parameters. In contrast, a rotation about the minimum moment of inertia axis is always stable for a sufficiently small angular velocity. The MACSYMA program, which we used to obtain the transition curves, is included in the Appendix.


1831 ◽  
Vol 121 ◽  
pp. 17-66

In last April I had the honour of presenting to the Society a paper containing expressions for the variations of the elliptic constants in the theory of the motions of the planets. The stability of the solar system is established by means of these expressions, if the planets move in a space absolutely devoid of any resistance*, for it results from their form that however far the ap­proximation be carried, the eccentricity, the major axis, and the tangent of the inclination of the orbit to a fixed plane, contain only periodic inequalities, each of the three other constants, namely, the longitude of the node, the longitude of the perihelion, and the longitude of the epoch, contains a term which varies with the time, and hence the line of apsides and the line of nodes revolve continually in space. The stability of the system may therefore be inferred, which would not be the case if the eccentricity, the major axis, or the tangent of the inclination of the orbit to a fixed plane contained a term varying with the time, however slowly. The problem of the precession of the equinoxes admits of a similar solution; of the six constants which determine the position of the revolving body, and the axis of instantaneous rotation at any moment, three have only periodic inequalities, while each of the other three has a term which varies with the time. From the manner in which these constants enter into the results, the equilibrium of the system may be inferred to be stable, as in the former case. Of the constants in the latter problem, the mean angular velocity of rotation may be considered analogous to the mean motion of a planet, or its major axis ; the geographical longitude, and the cosine of the geographical latitude of the pole of the axis of instantaneous rotation, to the longitude of the perihelion and the eccentricity; the longitude of the first point of Aries and the obliquity of the ecliptic, to the longitude of the node and the inclination of the orbit to a fixed plane; and the longitude of a given line in the body revolving, passing through its centre of gravity, to the longitude of the epoch. By the stability of the system I mean that the pole of the axis of rotation has always nearly the same geographical latitude, and that the angular velocity of rotation, and the obliquity of the ecliptic vary within small limits, and periodically. These questions are considered in the paper I now have the honour of submitting to the Society. It remains to investigate the effect which is produced by the action of a resisting medium; in this case the latitude of the pole of the axis of rotation, the obliquity of the ecliptic, and the angular velocity of rotation might vary considerably, although slowly, and the climates undergo a con­siderable change.


The initial value problem for the two-dimensional inviscid vorticity equation, linearized about an azimuthal basic velocity field with monotonic angular velocity, is solved exactly for mode-one disturbances. The solution behaviour is investigated for large time using asymptotic methods. The circulation of the basic state is found to govern the ultimate fate of the disturbance: for basic state vorticity distributions with non-zero circulation, the perturbation tends to the steady solution first mentioned in Michalke & Timme (1967), while for zero circulation, the perturbation grows without bound. The latter case has potentially important implications for the stability of isolated eddies in geophysics.


1971 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 273-287
Author(s):  
ELFED MORGAN

1. The organization of the swimming legs of N. gracile has been described. The legs beat ventrally so the animal swims with the dorsal side foremost. The joints between the major segments of the leg are extended for most of the power stroke, but the distal segments articulate sequentially later in the beat, commencing with the flexion of the femoro-tibial joint at the end of the power stroke. Continued flexion reduces the leg radius considerably during the recovery stroke. 2. Animals swimming at constant depth were found to have a leg-beat frequency of about 1 beat/s. Above this the rate of ascent increased rapidly with increasing frequency of beat. Abduction or adduction of the leg usually occurred prior to the start of the power stroke with the femur in the elevated position. 3. Assuming a fixed limb profile at constant angular velocity, maximum lift was calculated to have occurred with the femur inclined at an angle of about 50° to the dorso-ventral body axis. The outward component of the lateral thrust decreased to zero at this point, and with further declination of the femur the lateral forces became inwardly directed. Of the different segments of the leg, tibia 2 and the tarsus and propodium contribute most of the hydrodynamic force. 4. The angular velocity of the leg varied during the power stroke, and the actual forces generated during two beats having the same amplitude and angular velocity but of high and low elevation were calculated. Greater lift occurred during the high-elevation beat when the leg continued to provide lift throughout the power stroke, whereas the low-elevation beat acquired negative lift values towards the end of the power stroke. The lateral thrust was now directed entirely inwards.


2018 ◽  
Vol 277 ◽  
pp. 168-177
Author(s):  
Mykhailo Berdnyk

It is the first generalized 3D mathematic model, which is created for calculating temperature fields in the empty isotropic rotary body, which is restricted by end surfaces and lateral surface of rotation and rotates with constant angular velocity around the axis OZ, with taking into account finite velocity of the heat conductivity in the form of the Dirichlet problem. In this work, an integral transformation was formulated for the 2D finite space, with the help of which a temperature field in the empty isotropic rotary body was determined in the form of convergence series by the Fourier functions.


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