Pendulum equation
An ordinary differential equation of the form
![]() | (*) |
where is a positive constant. A pendulum equation arises in the study of free oscillations of a mathematical pendulum in a gravity field — a point mass with one degree of freedom attached to the end of a non-extendible and incompressible weightless suspender, the other end of which is fastened on a hinge which permits the pendulum to rotate in a vertical plane. The unknown function
is the deviation angle of the pendulum at time
from the lower equilibrium position, measured in radians;
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where is the length of the suspender and
is the gravitational acceleration. The (approximate) equation describing the small oscillations of the pendulum about the lower equilibrium position has the form
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The qualitative investigation of the pendulum equation is carried out using the law of conservation of energy, which relates the position and the velocity of the pendulum:
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where is the total energy of the pendulum. The time scale can be chosen so that
. Then for an energy value
the pendulum performs an oscillatory movement (the velocity changes its sign periodically), whereas for
it rotates (the velocity has constant sign). The solution
of (*) with initial condition
,
for
, satisfies the relation
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where the Jacobi elliptic function has modulus
(cf. Jacobi elliptic functions).
Of great practical importance are equations close to the pendulum equation. The presence of a small friction that depends on the position and velocity of the pendulum leads to the equation
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the small oscillations of the pendulum with friction are described by the equation
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a particular case of which is the van der Pol equation. The oscillations of a pendulum for which the length of the suspender varies periodically (the motion of a swing) are described by the Hill equation, an important particular case of which is the Mathieu equation.
References
[1] | V.I. Arnol'd, "Ordinary differential equations" , M.I.T. (1973) (Translated from Russian) |
[2] | E. Kamke, "Differentialgleichungen: Lösungen und Lösungsmethoden" , 1. Gewöhnliche Differentialgleichungen , Chelsea, reprint (1971) |
[3] | A.A. Andronov, A.A. Vitt, A.E. Khaikin, "Theory of oscillators" , Dover, reprint (1987) (Translated from Russian) |
Comments
For and
,
with
the motion is periodic with amplitude
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and period
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which is a complete elliptic integral of the first kind, see [a1]. The periodically-forced damped pendulum
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and the parametrically-forced damped pendulum
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give rise to chaotic solutions. These are analyzed with Melnikov's method in, respectively, [a1] and [a3]. In [a4] the class of problems
![]() |
is studied with perturbation methods (cf. also Perturbation theory). Special attention is given to the averaging method (cf. e.g. Krylov–Bogolyubov method of averaging).
References
[a1] | J.K. Hale, "Ordinary differential equations" , Wiley (Interscience) (1969) |
[a2] | J. Guckenheimer, P. Holmes, "Nonlinear oscillations, dynamical systems, and bifurcation of vectorfields" , Springer (1983) |
[a3] | S. Wiggins, "Global bifurcations and chaos" , Springer (1988) |
[a4] | J.A. Sanders, F. Verhulst, "Averaging methods in nonlinear dynamical systems" , Springer (1985) |
[a5] | V.I. Arnol'd, A. Avez, "Problèmes ergodiques de la mécanique classique" , Gauthier-Villars (1967) (Translated from Russian) |
Pendulum equation. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Pendulum_equation&oldid=12140