Lec 13
Lec 13
Lec 13
1 Dissipation
We’ve been trying to ignore it, but in the real world there is friction. Friction
meansthatmechanicalenergyisconvertedtothermalenergy, andwenolonger
havea‘conservative’system.Butwecantry.
Ratherthan juststartwith adampedoscillation (as in eqn25.1 in LL), I will
motivateamodified Euler-Lagrange equationwhichincludesdissipation,andthen
usethistoarriveatdampedoscillations.
Imaginesomefractionofkineticenergyiscoupletothermalenergyperunit
time.
Z
L0 (q, q̇) = (T + Tµ ) − U = L + T dt
Z
d ∂L0 d ∂L
d ∂
= + (T ) dt
dt ∂q̇ dt ∂q̇
dt ∂q̇
d ∂L
∂ ∂L0
= +
(T ) =
dt ∂q̇
∂q̇ ∂q
∂L0 ∂L
givenuniform suchthat =
∂q ∂q
d ∂L ∂L ∂
⇒ = − (T )
dt ∂q̇ ∂q ∂q̇
GeneralizingT toanyvelocitydependentfunction,
1X
Let D = bjk q̇j q̇k “dissipativefunction”
2
j,k
or,foronedegreeoffreedom,simply
1
D = bq̇ 2
2
1
modifiedE-L
d ∂L ∂L ∂D
= −
dt ∂q̇ ∂q ∂q̇
∂L
suchthat ṗ = − bq̇
∂q
where ∂L
∂q istheconservativeforce,andbq̇ isthedissipativeforce.
Damped systems lose energy with time until they come to rest. The rate of
energyloss is given bythedissipationfunction.
dE d ∂L
= q̇ −L
dt dt ∂q̇
d ∂L ∂L ∂L ∂L ∂L
= q̇ + q̈ − + q̇ + q̈
dt ∂q̇ ∂q̇ ∂t ∂q ∂q̇
d ∂L ∂L
= q̇ − normallyzero,but...
dt ∂q̇ ∂q
dE ∂D
= −q̇ = −2D
dt ∂q̇
Notethatthelastlineisjusttherateofworkdonebyfrictionasforce× velocity.
∂L
Allofthisisassumingnoexternaldrivingforce(i.e., ∂t = 0).
2 Damped Oscillator
Let’sputthistoworkonourharmonicoscillatortomakeamorerealisticdamped
oscillator.
1 1
for L = mẋ 2 − kx 2
2 2
1 2
and D = bẋ
2
2
theequationsofmotionare
k
mẍ = −kx − bẋ, ω02 =
m
or
b
ẍ + 2λẋ + ω02 x = 0, 2λ =
m
This differentialequation is best solved with complex exponentials, but thesolution
canbewritteninrealformas
“underdamped”
x (t) = ae−λt cos (ω1 t + φ) for λ < ω 0
q
where ω 1 = ω02 − λ2
“overdamped”
�
x (t) = e−λt a1 eβt + a2 e−βt for λ < ω 0
q
where β= λ2 − ω02 , note β < λ ⇒ decay
3
“criticallydamped”
x (t) = e−λt (a1 + a2 t) for λ = ω 0
f
a2 = q
2
m (ω 2 − ω02 ) + 4λ2 ω 2
2λω
tan θ = 2
ω − ω02
4
1
x (t) ' a2 cos (ωt + θ) for t (1)
λ
x (t) a2
→ = (2)
F (t) f
TransferFunctions