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ME 563 Mechanical Vibrations Lecture #2: Newton-Euler Laws (Derivation of Equations of Motion)

This document summarizes key concepts from Lecture 2 of the mechanical vibrations course ME 563. It discusses Newton-Euler laws and the derivation of equations of motion using Euler's laws about the center of mass and other reference points. An example is presented of a rolling disc on an incline to demonstrate applying constraints and transforming coordinates to obtain the equation of motion without static terms. A second example shows a rolling disc on a moving cart with five equations of motion and five unknowns.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
132 views

ME 563 Mechanical Vibrations Lecture #2: Newton-Euler Laws (Derivation of Equations of Motion)

This document summarizes key concepts from Lecture 2 of the mechanical vibrations course ME 563. It discusses Newton-Euler laws and the derivation of equations of motion using Euler's laws about the center of mass and other reference points. An example is presented of a rolling disc on an incline to demonstrate applying constraints and transforming coordinates to obtain the equation of motion without static terms. A second example shows a rolling disc on a moving cart with five equations of motion and five unknowns.

Uploaded by

nils4586
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ME 563

Mechanical Vibrations
Lecture #2
Newton-Euler Laws
(Derivation of equations of motion)

Newton-Euler Laws

Flavors of Eulers Law

What point A should we use?


A = CM
A is fixed
A moves parallel to CM

Proof of the Previous


Slide (first two lines)
Parallel axis theorem (IA=Icm+MrA/cm2)

Example
Rolling Disc on Incline

K is massless and linear


No slip (velocity of point in disc at incline is zero)

Example
Rolling Disc on Incline
Eulers Law about
Center of Mass

FCM = MA CM

Newtons Law

() j + (K ( x x u ) f + Mgsin )i = M ( x)i
Mx + Mgsin K ( x x u ) = f

Applying Constraints
x=-a (rolling constraint)

Two equations, two unknowns


1
Ma + Mgsin + K ( a + x u ) = Icm
a
(Icm + Ma2 ) + Mgasin + Ka(a + x u ) = 0
2
2
I
+
Ma

+
+Ka
= Mgasin Kax u
( cm
)

Example
Rolling Disc on Incline
dH A
CM = dH A
MA =
+ rA MR
dt
dt

Eulers Law about


Point A

d
IA k)
(
dt
aMgsin k + aK ( x x u )k = ICM k IA = aMgsin + aK ( x x u )

(aj) (MgJ) + (aj) (K ( x x u )i) =

dH B
CM = dH B
MB =
+ rB MR
dt
dt

Eulers Law about


Point B

d
IB k)
(
dt
2afk + aMgsin k aK ( x x u )k = ICM k IB = 2af + aMgsin aK ( x x u )

(2aj) ( f )i + (aj) (MgJ K ( x x u )i) =

Example
Rolling Disc on Incline
What if we choose
x as our independent
variable?

2
2
I
+
Ma

+
Ka
= Mgasin aKx u
( CM
)

How do we check the equation of motion?

Example
Rolling Disc on Incline
To eliminate static terms from the equation of
motion, we can transform our coordinates:
= dynamic + static
2
2
I
+
Ma

+
Ka
(dynamic + static ) = Mgasin aKx u
( CM
) dynamic
2
2
2
I
+
Ma

+
Ka

=
Mgasin

aKx

Ka

( CM
) dynamic
dynamic
u static

Static free body diagram

2
2
I
+
Ma

+
Ka
dynamic = 0
( CM
) dynamic

10

Example
Rolling Disc on a Moving Cart
1
K1
g
f(t)
D
No slip M1,Icm

3D/4

M2
Viscous damping
C2

K2
x2

11

Example
Rolling Disc on a Moving Cart
f(t)

K1xB

B
M1g
A

F1
F2

F2
F1
C2x2

K2x2

M2g
F3

12

Example
Rolling Disc on a Moving Cart

5 equations
5 unknowns

13

Example
Rolling Disc on a Moving Cart

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