0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views7 pages

SPA5304 Physical Dynamics: 1.1 Example: The Planar Pendulum

1) The document discusses Lagrangian mechanics and uses the example of a planar pendulum. It compares the Newtonian and Lagrangian approaches. 2) The Lagrangian approach is simpler - it directly obtains the equation of motion for the generalized coordinate φ without introducing a constraint force. It also shows that the energy is conserved. 3) The document then discusses constraints in Lagrangian mechanics. Holonomic constraints can be written as functions of the generalized coordinates and reduce the degrees of freedom. Non-holonomic constraints cannot be integrated in this way.

Uploaded by

Roy Vesey
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views7 pages

SPA5304 Physical Dynamics: 1.1 Example: The Planar Pendulum

1) The document discusses Lagrangian mechanics and uses the example of a planar pendulum. It compares the Newtonian and Lagrangian approaches. 2) The Lagrangian approach is simpler - it directly obtains the equation of motion for the generalized coordinate φ without introducing a constraint force. It also shows that the energy is conserved. 3) The document then discusses constraints in Lagrangian mechanics. Holonomic constraints can be written as functions of the generalized coordinates and reduce the degrees of freedom. Non-holonomic constraints cannot be integrated in this way.

Uploaded by

Roy Vesey
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

SPA5304 Physical Dynamics Lecture 10

David Vegh

29 January 2019

1 Lagrangian mechanics

1.1 Example: The planar pendulum

The purpose of this section is to:

(i) see the power of the Lagrangian approach

(ii) demonstrate that the variational principle works for constrained systems

1.1.1 Newtonian approach

p~˙ = m~g + N
~

Components:


mẍ = −N sin φ
mÿ = mg − N cos φ
where N ≡ |N~ |.
~ is a constraint force. It is perpendicular to the motion ⇒ does no work ⇒ energy is conserved.
N
Relation between the Cartesian coordinates (x, y) and φ:

ẍ = l(+ cos φ φ̈ − sin φ φ̇2 )


  
x = l sin φ ẋ = l(cos φ)φ̇
⇒ ⇒
y = l cos φ ẏ = −l(sin φ)φ̇ ÿ = l(− sin φ φ̈ − cos φ φ̇2 )

Plug these into the equation of motion:

ml(cos φ φ̈ − sin φ φ̇2 ) = −N sin φ




ml(− sin φ φ̈ − cos φ φ̇2 ) = mg − N cos φ

1
Multiply the first equation by cos φ and the second equation by sin φ, then subtract the two equations from
each other to eliminate N . We get
g
φ̈ = − sin φ
l
N can be expressed
ml(cos φ φ̈ − sin φ φ̇2 )
N= = mg cos φ + mlφ̇2
− sin φ | {z } | {z }
counter gravity centripetal force

~ . We also needed the EOMs for x and y to derive an EOM for φ.


We had to introduce a constraint force N

1.1.2 Lagrangian approach

There is one (holonomic) constraint: r = l. Thus, there is 1 degree of freedom. We can use φ as the
generalised coordinate.  
x = l sin φ ẋ = l(cos φ)φ̇

y = l cos φ ẏ = −l(sin φ)φ̇

• Kinetic energy
Plug the above expressions for ẋ and ẏ in the Cartesian formula:
1 1
T = m(ẋ2 + ẏ 2 ) = ml2 φ̇2
2 2
Alternatively, we can start with the kinetic energy expressed in polar coordinates, and then set r = l, ṙ = 0:
1 1
T = m(ṙ2 + r2 φ̇2 ) = ml2 φ̇2
2 2

• Potential energy

V = −mgy = −mgl cos φ (the y axis is pointing downwards!)

• Lagrangian

1 2 2
L=T −V = ml φ̇ + mgl cos φ
2

The momentum conjugate to φ:


∂L
pφ = = ml2 φ̇
∂ φ̇
The Euler-Lagrange equation
d ∂L ∂L
=
dt ∂ φ̇ ∂φ
gives
ml2 φ̈ = −mgl sin φ

g
φ̈ = − sin φ
l

2
• This derivation is much simpler and more straightforward than the old Newtonian method:

~ never appeared.
(i) N

(ii) Directly got the equation of motion for φ.

• The energy E = T + V is conserved. (Check it)

• pφ is angular momentum

~ = ~r × m~r˙
L
p
~ = l · m ẋ2 + ẏ 2 = l · ml|φ̇| = |pφ |
|L|
Therefore
~
|pφ | = |L|

3
2 Constraints
• Holonomic constraints
Constraints that can be written in the form of

f1 (~r1 , . . . , ~rN , t) = 0 

f2 (~r1 , . . . , ~rN , t) = 0 

.. h equations → reduce the #DoF from 3N to 3N − h ≡ n
. 



fh (~r1 , . . . , ~rN , t) = 0

The constraint equations can be solved in therms of n independent variables

~q = (q1 , . . . , qn )

These are the generalised coordinates.



 ~r1 = ~r1 (q1 , . . . , qn )

..
 .

~rN = ~rN (q1 , . . . , qn )

• Non-holonomic constraints
These are all other types of constraints which are not holonomic.

4
2.1 Examples for holonomic constraints
2.1.1 The planar pendulum

The constraint equation is


f = x2 + y 2 − l 2 = 0

This can be solved using the generalised coordinate φ as


x = l sin φ y = l cos φ

2.1.2 Rigid bodies

|~ri − ~rj | − cij = 0

2.1.3 A disk rolling without slipping in one dimension

No slipping means dx = Rdφ, or if we divide both sides by dt,


ẋ = Rφ̇ (1)
This can be integrated to give
x = Rφ + const.
which is holonomic. We can use either x or φ as the generalised coordinate.

2.2 Examples for non-holonomic constraints


2.2.1 A disk rolling without slipping in higher dimensions

In higher dimensions, the analog of (1) cannot be integrated and the constraint is therefore non-holonomic
(see Goldstein et al. p15-16).

2.2.2 Other examples

5
2.3 Variational calculus with constraints

Z t2
S= dt L(~r, ~r˙ )
t1

Find the extremum as before. Now the variation is restricted to be in M :


Z t2 Z t2   Z t2  
∂L ∂L ∂L d ∂L
0 = δM S = δM dt L(~r, ~r˙ ) = dt δM ~r + δM ~r˙ = dt − δM ~r
t1 t1 ∂~r ∂~r˙ t1 ∂~r dt ∂~r˙

This is the same result as in the unconstrained case, except we have δM ~r instead of δ~r. From this result
we cannot conclude that the Euler-Lagrange equation inside the parentheses vanishes, because δM ~r is not
completely arbitrary: it is constrained to lie in the tangent space of M .

So the above result does not put any constraint on the normal component and we get the equation
d ∂L ∂L ~
− =N
dt ∂~r˙ ∂~r
~ is a constraint force perependicular to M .
where N

6
2.4 Procedure for solving problems with holonomic constraints
(i) Determine the configuration manifold (e.g. x2 + y 2 = l2 ) and introduce generalised coordinates on it:

{qi }, i = 1, 2, . . . , n where n is the #DoF

(ii) Re-express the kinetic energy T in terms of ~q and ~q˙.


If the constraints are time-independent and ~ri = ~ri (~q), then T is quadratic in ~q˙

X1
T = aij (~q)q˙i q˙j
i,j
2

E.g. planar pendulum: q = φ and T = 1


2 ml2 φ̇2
|{z}
a(φ)

(iii) Construct the Lagrangian

L = T − V (~q)

and solve the Euler-Lagrange equations


d ∂L ∂L
= , i = 1, 2, . . . , n
dt ∂ q̇i ∂qi

You might also like