1 / 32

Maple for Lagrangian Mechanics

Maple for Lagrangian Mechanics . Frank Wang. Newton. Newton’s Second Law: Forces, masses, accelerations. Lagrange. Variational principle formulation: Kinetic energy minus potential energy is minimum. 1-D Motion under Gravity. x. x. t. t. Fastest Path. lifeguard. swimmer.

zabrina
Télécharger la présentation

Maple for Lagrangian Mechanics

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. Maple for Lagrangian Mechanics Frank Wang

  2. Newton • Newton’s Second Law: Forces, masses, accelerations

  3. Lagrange • Variational principle formulation: Kinetic energy minus potential energy is minimum.

  4. 1-D Motion under Gravity x x t t

  5. Fastest Path lifeguard swimmer

  6. Least Action • Geometric Optics • Classical Mechanics • General Relativity • Quantum Mechanics (Feynman’s Path Integral)

  7. Euler-Lagrange Equation • The only thing we need to know! • Euler-Lagrange equations gives equations of motion, which are differential equations.

  8. 1-D Motion under Gravity

  9. Equation of Motion

  10. Calculus of Variations • Finding derivative of a function w.r.t. another function,

  11. Using Maple • Substitute x(t) and v(t) with symbols, • Differentiate L w.r.t.var1 and var2 • Substitute var1 and var2 back to x(t) and v(t).

  12. Result • Lagrangian and Newtonian are identical: ma F

  13. Advantages • Straightforward • Only simple commands: subs, diff, dsolve • No external library • Treating x(t) and v(t) as two separate dependent variables. Maple 8 has a VariationalCalculuspackage.

  14. Lagrangian in 3 Steps • Perform coordinate transformation to express KE and PE in generalized coordinates. • Employ the Euler-Lagrange equations to derive equations of motion. • Solve differential equations to find the actual path.

  15. Euler-Lagrange Equation • The only thing we need to know! • Euler-Lagrange equations gives equations of motion, which are differential equations.

  16. Double Pendulum q1 q2

  17. Lagrangian for Double Pendulum Maple produces

  18. Two Degrees of Freedom • For mass 1, • For mass 2,

  19. Gyroscope • Many simple things can be deduced mathematically more rapidly than they can be really understood in a fundamental or simple sense. Feynman I-20-6

  20. Polar Coordinates r f

  21. Kepler Problem • Kinetic energy in polar coordinates: • Potential energy for inverse square law and a quadrupole term:

  22. Symmetry • Lagrangian of Kepler problem contains no f, • For rcoordinate,

  23. Planetary Motion • 18th Century: Lagrange discovered that planetary motion corresponds to least action. • 20th Century: Einstein formulated geodesic equation, i.e., the shortest “distance” in a curved space-time.

  24. General Relativity • Matter tells geometry how to curve, geometry tells matter how to move. • Motion in gravitational field is none other than finding the shortest connection between two points in a curved space-time.

  25. Geometry • Flat space • Curved space-time (Schwarzschild)

  26. Shortest Path • The shortest path corresponds to • Lagrangian is the integrand

  27. Lagrangian for GR • Flat space • Schwarzschild solution

  28. Lagrangian in 3 Steps • Perform coordinate transformation to express KE and PE in generalized coordinates. • Employ the Euler-Lagrange equations to derive equations of motion. • Solve differential equations to find the actual path.

  29. Euler-Lagrange Equation • The only thing we need to know! • Euler-Lagrange equations gives equations of motion, which are differential equations.

  30. Application of Maple • Perform coordinate transformation which otherwise will be very tedious. • Employ chain rule and rearrange equations. • Solve differential equations (using numerical method in most cases), and graph the results.

  31. Conclusions • Principle of Least Action is a powerful concept. • Maple is an ideal tool to handle this type of problems. • One can apply simple principle to elementary and sophisticated problems, and Maple does all the calculations.

More Related