scholarly journals A consideration of the torsional response of building frames

Author(s):  
A. Rutenberg

History of elastic static procedures for the seismic analysis of torsionally unbalanced building structures is briefly reviewed. It is suggested that the provisions of NZS 4203:1976, accounting for modal coupling, are based on inconsistent interpretation of results from well known two-degrees-of-freedom models. An alternative dynamic procedure
is described which, while retaining the basic two-dimensional features
of NZS 4203:1976 torsional provisions, is equivalent to three-dimensional modal spectral analysis. The procedure also results in a substantial simplification of the analysis compared with standard dynamic computer techniques now available to the structural engineer.

1993 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 965-979 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hepp ◽  
A. J. Van Opstal ◽  
D. Straumann ◽  
B. J. Hess ◽  
V. Henn

1. Although the eye has three rotational degrees of freedom, eye positions, during fixations, saccades, and smooth pursuit, with the head stationary and upright, are constrained to a plane by ListingR's law. We investigated whether Listing's law for rapid eye movements is implemented at the level of the deeper layers of the superior colliculus (SC). 2. In three alert rhesus monkeys we tested whether the saccadic motor map of the SC is two dimensional, representing oculocentric target vectors (the vector or V-model), or three dimensional, representing the coordinates of the rotation of the eye from initial to final position (the quaternion or Q-model). 3. Monkeys made spontaneous saccadic eye movements both in the light and in the dark. They were also rotated about various axes to evoke quick phases of vestibular nystagmus, which have three degrees of freedom. Eye positions were measured in three dimensions with the magnetic search coil technique. 4. While the monkey made spontaneous eye movements, we electrically stimulated the deeper layers of the SC and elicited saccades from a wide range of initial positions. According to the Q-model, the torsional component of eye position after stimulation should be uniquely related to saccade onset position. However, stimulation at 110 sites induced no eye torsion, in line with the prediction of the V-model. 5. Activity of saccade-related burst neurons in the deeper layers of the SC was analyzed during rapid eye movements in three dimensions. No systematic eye-position dependence of the movement fields, as predicted by the Q-model, could be detected for these cells. Instead, the data fitted closely the predictions made by the V-model. 6. In two monkeys, both SC were reversibly inactivated by symmetrical bilateral injections of muscimol. The frequency of spontaneous saccades in the light decreased dramatically. Although the remaining spontaneous saccades were slow, Listing's law was still obeyed, both during fixations and saccadic gaze shifts. In the dark, vestibularly elicited fast phases of nystagmus could still be generated in three dimensions. Although the fastest quick phases of horizontal and vertical nystagmus were slower by about a factor of 1.5, those of torsional quick phases were unaffected. 7. On the basis of the electrical stimulation data and the properties revealed by the movement field analysis, we conclude that the collicular motor map is two dimensional. The reversible inactivation results suggest that the SC is not the site where three-dimensional fast phases of vestibular nystagmus are generated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (07) ◽  
pp. 1850066
Author(s):  
Payel Mukhopadhyay ◽  
K. Rajesh Nayak

Carter's constant is a nontrivial conserved quantity of motion of a particle moving in stationary axisymmetric spacetime. In the version of the theorem originally given by Carter, due to the presence of two Killing vectors, the system effectively has two degrees of freedom. We propose an extension to the first version of Carter's theorem to a system having three degrees of freedom to find two functionally independent Carter-like integrals of motion. We further generalize the theorem to a dynamical system with [Formula: see text] degrees of freedom. We further study the implications of Carter's constant to superintegrability and present a different approach to probe a superintegrable system. Our formalism gives another viewpoint to a superintegrable system using the simple observation of separable Hamiltonian according to Carter's criteria. We then give some examples by constructing some two-dimensional superintegrable systems based on this idea and also show that all three-dimensional simple classical superintegrable potentials are also Carter separable.


Author(s):  
Jianmin Xu ◽  
Zhaohong Song

This paper is about blade flutter in a tuned rotor. With the aid of the combination of three dimensional structural finite element method, two dimensional aerodynamical finite difference method and strip theory, the quasi-steady models in which two degrees of freedom for a single wing were considered have been extended to multiple degrees of freedom for the whole blade in a tuned rotor. The eigenvalues solved from the blade motion equation have been used to judge whether the system is stable or not. The calculating procedure has been formed and using it the first stage rotating blades of a compressor where flutter had occurred, have been predicted. The numerical flutter boundaries have good agreement with the experimental ones.


Author(s):  
Dmitry Chalikov ◽  
Alexander V. Babanin

An exact numerical scheme for a long-term simulation of three-dimensional potential fully-nonlinear periodic gravity waves is suggested. The scheme is based on a surface-following non-orthogonal curvilinear coordinate system and does not use the technique based on expansion of the velocity potential. The Poisson equation for the velocity potential is solved iteratively. The Fourier transform method, the second-order accuracy approximation of the vertical derivatives on a stretched vertical grid and the fourth-order Runge-Kutta time stepping are used. The scheme is validated by simulation of steep Stokes waves. The model requires considerable computer resources, but the one-processor version of the model for PC allows us to simulate an evolution of a wave field with thousands degrees of freedom for hundreds of wave periods. The scheme is designed for investigation of the nonlinear two-dimensional surface waves, for generation of extreme waves as well as for the direct calculations of a nonlinear interaction rate. After implementation of the wave breaking parameterization and wind input, the model can be used for the direct simulation of a two-dimensional wave field evolution under the action of wind, nonlinear wave-wave interactions and dissipation. The model can be used for verification of different types of simplified models.


Geophysics ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Biot

The theory of three‐dimensional gravity instability of multilayers is developed with particular application to salt structures. It is shown that three‐dimensional solutions are immediately obtained without further numerical work from the solution of the corresponding two‐dimensional problem. Application to a number of typical three‐dimensional structures yields the characteristic distance between peaks and crests and shows that this distance does not differ significantly from the wavelength of the two‐dimensional solution. Various periodic patterns are examined corresponding to rectangular and hexagonal cells. The time history of nonperiodic structures corresponding to initial deviations from perfect horizontality is also derived. The method is applied to the three‐dimensional problem of generation of salt structures when the time‐history of sedimentation is taken into account with variable thickness and compaction of the overburden and establishes the general validity of the geological conclusions derived from the previous two‐dimensional treatment of the same problem (Biot and Odé, 1965). The present method of deriving three‐dimensional solutions, which is developed here in the special context of gravity instability, is valid for a wide variety of problems in theoretical physics.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 406-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.J Olejniczak ◽  
T.M Smith ◽  
M.M Skinner ◽  
F.E Grine ◽  
R.N.M Feeney ◽  
...  

Thick molar enamel is among the few diagnostic characters of hominins which are measurable in fossil specimens. Despite a long history of study and characterization of Paranthropus molars as relatively ‘hyper-thick’, only a few tooth fragments and controlled planes of section (designed to be proxies of whole-crown thickness) have been measured. Here, we measure molar enamel thickness in Australopithecus africanus and Paranthropus robustus using accurate microtomographic methods, recording the whole-crown distribution of enamel. Both taxa have relatively thick enamel, but are thinner than previously characterized based on two-dimensional measurements. Three-dimensional measurements show that P. robustus enamel is not hyper-thick, and A. africanus enamel is relatively thinner than that of recent humans. Interspecific differences in the whole-crown distribution of enamel thickness influence cross-sectional measurements such that enamel thickness is exaggerated in two-dimensional sections of A. africanus and P. robustus molars. As such, two-dimensional enamel thickness measurements in australopiths are not reliable proxies for the three-dimensional data they are meant to represent. The three-dimensional distribution of enamel thickness shows different patterns among species, and is more useful for the interpretation of functional adaptations than single summary measures of enamel thickness.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-130
Author(s):  
Shing-Sham Lai ◽  
George T. Will

An inelastic analysis program for three-dimensional structures subjected to static/gravity loads and (or) dynamic loads in the form of three translational and orthogonal components of base motions is described. Using incremental integration technique, the program computes structural response as a function of time. Deformation history of elements within the structure can be traced and pertinent information obtained via user element subroutines. Each node can possess up to six displacement degrees of freedom and can accommodate user elements with any specified nodes and degrees of freedom per node. The program is very flexible for modelling different structural configurations, and components like beam column elements, shear wall elements, slab elements, semirigid connection elements, and inelastic spring elements can be easily added to the base program. Key words: inelastic analysis, three-dimensional structures, earthquake, computer program, dynamic, stiffness matrix, base accelerations, unbalanced forces, element subroutines.


2020 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 603
Author(s):  
Д.А. Конюх ◽  
Я.М. Бельтюков

The random matrix theory is applied to describe the vibrational properties of two-dimensional disordered systems with a large number of degrees of freedom. It is shown that the most significant mechanical properties of amorphous solids can be taken into account using the correlated Wishart ensemble. In this ensemble, an excess vibrational density of states over the Debye law is observed as a peak in the reduced density of states g(ω)/ω. Such a peak is known as the boson peak, which was observed in many experiments and numerical simulations for two-dimensional and three-dimensional disordered systems. It is shown that two-dimensional systems have a number of differences in the asymptotic behavior of the boson peak.


Crystals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 852
Author(s):  
Simone Zanotto

Metasurfaces acting on electromagnetic fields have emerged as powerful tools that can address all the wave’s degrees of freedom: amplitude, phase and polarization. It is especially with respect to polarization that their role is steadily growing: metasurfaces can indeed perform, by design, operations that would usually require very specific, delicate and expensive natural or synthetic ordinary crystals. Here, I will first briefly review the history of light polarization, and its connection with ordinary crystals. Subsequently, I will highlight in which sense metasurfaces are artificial quasi-two-dimensional crystals, evidencing their potential as future polarization-handling (meta) materials.


2012 ◽  
Vol 229-231 ◽  
pp. 1798-1801
Author(s):  
Ze Rong Li ◽  
Bi Ru Li ◽  
Li Qin ◽  
Jian Chun Gong

This article analyses the development history of Engineering graphics, researches on modern engineering graphics, and puts forward the problem of modern engineering graphics, as drawing and interpreting drawings all need special training. For the problem this article puts forward the new structure of pattern: using three-dimensional pattern to replace traditional two- dimensional pattern, expressing the inside and outside structure shape of parts, by the profile and rotation of three-dimensional pattern. the three-dimensional is more directer and visualer than the two-dimensional patterns as the same method to express the structure and shape of objects. use three-dimensional to express to avoid the two conversions from three-dimensional to two-dimensional(drawing) or from two-dimensional to three- dimensional(interpret drawings).


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