scholarly journals Note on a ball rolling over a sphere: Integrable Chaplygin system with an invariant measure without Chaplygin hamiltonization

2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bozidar Jovanovic

In this note we consider the nonholonomic problem of rolling without slipping and twisting of an ??-dimensional balanced ball over a fixed sphere. This is a ????(??)?Chaplygin system with an invariant measure that reduces to the cotangent bundle ??*?????1. For the rigid body inertia operator r I? = I? + ?I, I = diag(I1,...,In) with a symmetry I1 = I2 = ... =Ir ? Ir+1 = Ir+2 = ... = In, we prove that the reduced system is integrable, general trajectories are quasi-periodic, while for ?? ? 1, ?? ? 1 the Chaplygin reducing multiplier method does not apply.

2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (9) ◽  
pp. 1483-1489
Author(s):  
T. B. Goldvarg ◽  
V. N. Shapovalov

1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (2) ◽  
pp. 171-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Shabana

In the dynamics of multibody systems that consist of interconnected rigid and deformable bodies, it is desirable to have a formulation that preserves the exactness of the rigid body inertia. As demonstrated in this paper, the incremental finite element approach, which is often used to solve large rotation problems, does not lead to the exact inertia of simple structures when they rotate as rigid bodies. Nonetheless, the exact inertia properties, such as the mass moments of inertia and the moments of mass, of the rigid bodies can be obtained using the finite element shape functions that describe large rigid body translations by introducing an intermediate element coordinate system. The results of application of the parallel axis theorem can be obtained using the finite element shape functions by simply changing the element nodal coordinates. As demonstrated in this investigation, the exact rigid body inertia properties in case of rigid body rotations can be obtained using the shape function if the nodal coordinates are defined using trigonometric functions. The analysis presented in this paper also demonstrates that a simple expression for the kinetic energy can be obtained for flexible bodies that undergo large displacements without the need for interpolation of large rotation coordinates.


2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis García-Naranjo

We consider the multi-dimensional generalisation of the problem of a sphere, with axi-symmetric mass distribution, that rolls without slipping or spinning over a plane. Using recent results from Garc?a-Naranjo [21] and Garc?a-Naranjo and Marrero [22], we show that the reduced equations of motion possess an invariant measure and may be represented in Hamiltonian form by Chaplygin?s reducing multiplier method. We also prove a general result on the existence of first integrals for certain Hamiltonisable Chaplygin systems with internal symmetries that is used to determine conserved quantities of the problem.


2013 ◽  
pp. 141-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. Borisov ◽  
◽  
I. S. Mamaev ◽  
I. A. Bizyaev ◽  
◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ahmed A. Shabana ◽  
Hussien A. Hussien ◽  
José L. Escalona

Abstract There are three basic finite element formulations, which are used in multibody dynamics. These are the floating frame reference approach, the incremental method and the large rotation vector approach. In the floating frame of reference and incremental formulations, the slopes are assumed small in order to define infinitesimal rotations that can be treated and transformed as vectors. This description, however, limits the use of some important elements such as beams and plates in a wide range of large displacement applications. As demonstrated in some recent publications, if infinitesimal rotations are used as nodal coordinates, the use of the finite element incremental formulation in the large reference displacement analysis does not lead to exact modeling of the rigid body inertia when the structures rotate as rigid bodies. In this paper, a new and simple finite element procedure that employs the mathematical definition of the slope and uses it to define the element coordinates instead of the infinitesimal and finite rotations is developed for large rotation and deformation problems. By using this description and by defining the element coordinates in the global system, not only the need for performing coordinate transformation is avoided, but also a simple expression for the inertia forces is obtained. Furthermore, the resulting mass matrix is constant and it is the same matrix that appears in linear structural dynamics. It is demonstrated in this paper, that this coordinate description leads to exact modeling of the rigid body inertia when the structure rotate as rigid bodies. Nonetheless, the stiffness matrix becomes nonlinear function of time even in the case of small displacements. The method presented in this paper differs from previous large rotation vector formulations in the sense that the inertia forces, the kinetic energy, and the strain energy are not expressed in terms of any orientation coordinates, and therefore, the method does not require interpolation of finite rotations. While the use of the formulation is demonstrated using a simple planar beam element, the generalization of the method to other element types and to the three dimensional case is straightforward. Using the finite element procedure presented in this paper, beams and plates can be treated as isoparametric elements.


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