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1940 Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapse
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Second-Order System Dynamic Response
The general expression for a 2nd-order system is This is a linear 2nd-order ODE, which can be rearranged as wn (= ) is the natural frequency, which equals for a RLC circuit and for a spring-mass-damper system. z is the damping ratio, which equals for a RLC circuit and for a spring-mass-damper system.
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Solutions to the ODE with Step-Input Forcing
For step-input forcing, there are 3 specific solutions of the ODE because there are 3 different roots of the characteristic equation (see Appendix I). =
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The solution is of the form
where and with OR with The two initial conditions used are and y(0)=0.
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Underdamped Case (0<z<1 )
The solution is Eqn. 5.57: M(w) = y(t)/KA versus wnt
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Critically Damped Case (z = 1 )
The solution is Eqn. 5.59:
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Overdamped Case (z > 1 )
The solution is Eqn. 5.60:
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Step-Input Forcing Terminology
wd ringing frequency Figure 5.7
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Sinusoidal-Input Forcing
For sinusoidal-input forcing, the solution typically is recast into expressions for M(w) and f(w) (see Eqns and Appendix I). Figures 5.9 and 5.10
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In-Class Example Consider the RLC circuit (R = 2 W; C = 0.5 F; L = 0.5 H); see Figure H.12, pg 513 for an example circuit diagram Is it underdamped, critically damped, or overdamped ? z = R/√(4L/C) = 1 → critically damped With sine input forcing of 3sin2t: What is its magnitude ratio ? w/wn = w/√(1/LC) = (2)(0.5) = 1 → M = 1/(2zw/wn) = 0.5 (see eqn [5.64])
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