scholarly journals On One Case of Reducibility of the Equations of Motion of a Complex Mechanical System

Author(s):  
V.Yu. Olshanskiy ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolay Makeyev ◽  

Criteria for the existence of certain types of algebraic first integrals of the equation of motion of a mechanical system of variable mass composition and variable configuration are given. The carrier body of the system (base body) rotates around a fixed pole in a stationary homogeneous gravity field under the influence of specified nonstationary forces. The types of partial integrals are indicated and restrictions are established that determine their existence.


Author(s):  
Nikolay Makeyev ◽  

Criteria for the existence of certain types of algebraic first integrals of the equation of motion of a mechanical system of variable mass composition and variable configuration are given. The carrier body of the system (base body) rotates around a fixed pole in a stationary homogeneous gravity field under the influence of specified nonstationary forces. The types of partial integrals are indicated and restrictions are established that determine their existence.


Author(s):  
Francisco González ◽  
Pierangelo Masarati ◽  
Javier Cuadrado ◽  
Miguel A. Naya

Formulating the dynamics equations of a mechanical system following a multibody dynamics approach often leads to a set of highly nonlinear differential-algebraic equations (DAEs). While this form of the equations of motion is suitable for a wide range of practical applications, in some cases it is necessary to have access to the linearized system dynamics. This is the case when stability and modal analyses are to be carried out; the definition of plant and system models for certain control algorithms and state estimators also requires a linear expression of the dynamics. A number of methods for the linearization of multibody dynamics can be found in the literature. They differ in both the approach that they follow to handle the equations of motion and the way in which they deliver their results, which in turn are determined by the selection of the generalized coordinates used to describe the mechanical system. This selection is closely related to the way in which the kinematic constraints of the system are treated. Three major approaches can be distinguished and used to categorize most of the linearization methods published so far. In this work, we demonstrate the properties of each approach in the linearization of systems in static equilibrium, illustrating them with the study of two representative examples.


Author(s):  
SD Yu ◽  
BC Wen

This article presents a simple procedure for predicting time-domain vibrational behaviors of a multiple degrees of freedom mechanical system with dry friction. The system equations of motion are discretized by means of the implicit Bozzak–Newmark integration scheme. At each time step, the discontinuous frictional force problem involving both the equality and inequality constraints is successfully reduced to a quadratic mathematical problem or the linear complementary problem with the introduction of non-negative and complementary variable pairs (supremum velocities and slack forces). The so-obtained complementary equations in the complementary pairs can be solved efficiently using the Lemke algorithm. Results for several single degree of freedom and multiple degrees of freedom problems with one-dimensional frictional constraints and the classical Coulomb frictional model are obtained using the proposed procedure and compared with those obtained using other approaches. The proposed procedure is found to be accurate, efficient, and robust in solving non-smooth vibration problems of multiple degrees of freedom systems with dry friction. The proposed procedure can also be applied to systems with two-dimensional frictional constraints and more sophisticated frictional models.


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