Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 On the Transient Response of Distributed Structures Interacting with Discrete Components
- 2 On the Problem of a Distributed Parameter System Carrying a Moving Oscillator
- 3 Nonlinear Normal Modes and Wave Transmission in a Class of Periodic Continuous Systems
- 4 Dynamics and Control of Articulated Anisotropic Timoshenko Beams
- 5 Numerical Techniques for Simulation, Parameter Estimation, and Noise Control in Structural Acoustic Systems
- 6 Distributed Transfer Function Analysis of Stepped and Ring-stiffened Cylindrical Shells
- 7 Orthogonal Sensing and Control of Continua with Distributed Transducers – Distributed Structronic System
- Index
4 - Dynamics and Control of Articulated Anisotropic Timoshenko Beams
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 On the Transient Response of Distributed Structures Interacting with Discrete Components
- 2 On the Problem of a Distributed Parameter System Carrying a Moving Oscillator
- 3 Nonlinear Normal Modes and Wave Transmission in a Class of Periodic Continuous Systems
- 4 Dynamics and Control of Articulated Anisotropic Timoshenko Beams
- 5 Numerical Techniques for Simulation, Parameter Estimation, and Noise Control in Structural Acoustic Systems
- 6 Distributed Transfer Function Analysis of Stepped and Ring-stiffened Cylindrical Shells
- 7 Orthogonal Sensing and Control of Continua with Distributed Transducers – Distributed Structronic System
- Index
Summary
Abstract
This chapter illustrates the use of continuum models in control design for stabilizing flexible structures. A 6-degree-of-freedom anisotropic Timoshenko beam with discrete nodes where lumped masses or actuators are located provides a sufficiently rich model to be of interest for mathematical theory as well as practical application. We develop concepts and tools to help answer engineering questions without having to resort to ad hoc heuristic (“physical”) arguments or faith. In this sense the paper is more mathematically oriented than engineering papers and vice versa at the same time. For instance we make precise time-domain solutions using the theory of semigroups of operators rather than formal “inverse Laplace transforms.” We show that the modes arise as eigenvalues of the generator of the semigroup, which are then related to the eigenvalues of the stiffness operator. With the feedback control, the modes are no longer orthogonal and the question naturally arises as to whether there is still a modal expansion. Here we prove that the eigenfunctions yield a biorthogonal Riesz basis and indicate the corresponding expansion. We prove mathematically that the number of eigenvalues is nonfinite, based on the theory of zeros of entire functions. We make precise the notion of asymptotic modes and indicate how to calculate them.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Dynamics and Control of Distributed Systems , pp. 121 - 201Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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