1 / 7

EGR 280 Mechanics 8 – Particle Kinematics I

EGR 280 Mechanics 8 – Particle Kinematics I. Dynamics Two distinct parts: Kinematics – concerned with the mathematics that describe the geometry of motion, without being concerned with why that motion takes place.

rosina
Télécharger la présentation

EGR 280 Mechanics 8 – Particle Kinematics I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EGR 280 Mechanics 8 – Particle Kinematics I

  2. Dynamics Two distinct parts: • Kinematics – concerned with the mathematics that describe the geometry of motion, without being concerned with why that motion takes place. • Kinetics – the study of the relationships between the forces that act on a body and its resulting motion.

  3. Rectilinear motion of particles (motion along a straight line) Keep track of the position of the particle with a position coordinate x: The time rate of change of the position is velocity: v = dx/dt The time rate of change of the velocity is acceleration: a = dv/dt and a = dv/dt = d(dx/dt)/dt = d2x/dt2; a = d2x/dt2 a = dv/dt = (dv/dx)(dx/dt) = v(dv/dx); a = v(dv/dx) O x

  4. 3 classes of problems: • Acceleration a is given as a function of time: integrate: v = ∫a dt; x = ∫v dt • Acceleration is given as a function of position: integrate: ∫v dv = ∫a dx • Acceleration is given as a function of velocity: integrate: ∫dt = ∫(1/a)dv or ∫dx = ∫(v/a)dv

  5. If we know the acceleration not as an analytical function, but as discrete values in time, we can still integrate these discrete values to find the velocity, and subsequently integrate the velocity to find the position. Consider the function below: The integral of f(x) can be piecewise-linearly approximated as: This is known as the Trapezoidal Rule, and has local error of order (Δt)2, so the smaller Δt is, the more accurately the numerical integration be performed. f(t) fi+1 fi Δt t

  6. Uniform rectilinear motion – when acceleration is zero a = 0 = dv/dt velocity is constant v0 = dx/dt x = x0 + v0t Uniformly accelerated rectilinear motion –when acceleration is constant a0 = dv/dt v = v0 + a0t v = dx/dt x = x0 + v0t + ½ a0t2 a0 = v(dv/dx) v2 = v02 + 2a0(x-x0)

  7. Motion of several particles xAB is the position from A to B xB = xA + xAB xB/A is the position of B with respect to A xB = xA + xB/A Taking time derivatives: vB = vA + vB/A vB = vA + vAB aB = aA + aB/A aB = aA + aAB 0 A B xAB = xB/A xA xB

More Related