Реферат: Nonlinear multi-wave coupling and resonance in elastic structures
Solutions to the evolution equations describing the phase and amplitude modulation of nonlinear waves are physically interpreted basing on the law of energy conservation.
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Nonlinear multi-wave coupling and resonance in elastic structures
Kovriguine DA
Solutions to the evolution equations describing the phase and amplitude modulation of nonlinear waves are physically interpreted basing on the law of energy conservation. An algorithm reducing the governing nonlinear partial differential equations to their normal form is considered. The occurrence of resonance at the expense of nonlinear multi-wave coupling is discussed.
Introduction
The principles of nonlinear multi-mode coupling were first recognized almost two century ago for various mechanical systems due to experimental and theoretical works of Faraday (1831), Melde (1859) and Lord Rayleigh (1883, 1887). Before First World War similar ideas developed in radio-telephone devices. After Second World War many novel technical applications appeared, including high-frequency electronic devices, nonlinear optics, acoustics, oceanology and plasma physics, etc. For instance, see [1] and also references therein. A nice historical sketch to this topic can be found in the review [2]. In this paper we try to trace relationships between the resonance and the dynamical stability of elastic structures.
Evolution equations
Consider a natural quasi-linear mechanical system with distributed parameters. Let motion be described by the following partial differential equations
(0)

where












Assume that the motion is defined by the Lagrangian




Here










This paper deals with the evolution dynamical processes in nonlinear mechanical Lagrangian systems. To understand clearly the nature of the governing evolution equations, we introduce the Hamiltonian function









(1)


where the difference




Note that the set (1) can be formally rewritten as
(2)


where


(3)


where



Parametric approach
As an illustrative example we consider the so-called Bernoulli-Euler model governing the motion of a thin bar, according the following equations [3]:
(4)

with the boundary conditions

By scaling the sought variables:


Notice that the validity range of the model is associated with the wave velocities that should not exceed at least the characteristic speed



where the frequencies




(5)

As one can see the right-hand term in eq. (5) contains a spatio-temporal parameter in the form of a standing wave. Allowances for the this wave-like parametric excitation become principal, if the typical velocity of longitudinal waves is comparable with the group velocities of bending waves, otherwise one can restrict consideration, formally assuming that


(6)

which takes into account the temporal parametric excitation only.
We can look for solutions to eq. (5), using the Bubnov-Galerkin procedure:

where


(7)

Here

stands for a coefficient containing parameters of the wave-number detuning:




Equations (7) describe the early evolution of waves at the expense of multi-mode parametric interaction. There is a key question on the correlation between phase orbits of the system (7) and the corresponding linearized subset
(8)

which results from eqs. (7) at

First, we rewrite the set (7) in the equivalent matrix form:













where the right-hand terms are a superposition of quasi-periodic functions at the combinational frequencies


So, one can continue the asymptotic procedure in the non-resonant case, i. e.


In a particular case of the external force

(9)

provided a couple of bending waves, having the wave numbers












can be interpreted as the phase matching conditions creating a triad of waves consisting of the primary high-frequency longitudinal wave, directly excited by the external force

Notice that in the limiting model (6) the corresponding set of amplitude equations is reduced just to the single pendulum-type equation frequently used in many applications:

It is known that this equation can possess unstable solutions at small values of


Solutions to eqs. (7) can be found using iterative methods of slowly varying phases and amplitudes:
(10)


where


By substituting this into eqs. (9), we obtain the first-order approximation equations
(11)


where



Equations (10) and (11), being of a Hamiltonian structure, possess the two evident first integrals


which allows one to integrate the system analytically. At


which forms the boundaries in the space of system parameters within the first zone of the parametric instability.
From the physical viewpoint, one can see that the parametric excitation of bending waves appears as a degenerated case of nonlinear wave interactions. It means that the study of resonant properties in nonlinear elastic systems is of primary importance to understand the nature of dynamical instability, even considering free nonlinear oscillations.
Normal forms
The linear subset of eqs. (0) describes a superposition of harmonic waves characterized by the dispersion relation

where




leads to the following linearly uncoupled equations

where the










The linearly uncoupled equations can be rewritten in an equivalent matrix form [5]
(12)


using the complex variables








where



Here


(13)


whose analytical solutions can be written immediately as a superposition of harmonic waves

where









A question is following. What is the difference between these two systems, or in other words, how the small nonlinearity is effective?
According to a method of normal forms (see for example [7,8]), we look for a solution to eqs. (12) in the form of a quasi-automorphism, i. e.
(14)

where




(15)

for example

where


By substituting the transform (14) into eqs. (12), we obtain the following partial differential equations to define

(16)

It is obvious that the eigenvalues of the operator





In the lowest-order approximation in


The polynomial components of




or

while


So, if at least the one eigenvalue of




Analogously, in the second-order approximation in


the eigenvalues of



By continuing the similar formal iterations one can define the transform (15). Thus, the sets (12) and (13), even in the absence of eigenvalues equal to zeroes, are associated with formally equivalent dynamical systems, since the function




For example, the most important 3-order resonances include
triple-wave resonant processes, when


generation of the second harmonic, as


The most important 4-order resonant cases are the following:
four-wave resonant processes, when




degenerated triple-wave resonant processes at


generation of the third harmonic, as


These resonances are mainly characterized by the amplitude modulation, the depth of which increases as the phase detuning approaches to some constant (e. g. to zero, if consider 3-order resonances). The waves satisfying the phase matching conditions form the so-called resonant ensembles.
Finally, in the second-order approximation, the so-called “non-resonant" interactions always take place. The phase matching conditions read the following degenerated expressions
cross-interactions of a wave pair at


self-action of a single wave as


Non-resonant coupling is characterized as a rule by a phase modulation.
The principal proposition of this section is following. If any nonlinear system (12) does not have any resonance, beginning from the order




To obtain a formal transform (15) in the resonant case, one should revise a structure of the set (13) by modifying its right-hand side:
(16)


where the nonlinear terms



Remarks
In practice the series


The theory of normal forms can be simply generalized in the case of the so-called essentially nonlinear systems, since the small parameter



Formally, the eigenvalues of operator

Resonance in multi-frequency systems
The resonance plays a principal role in the dynamical behavior of most physical systems. Intuitively, the resonance is associated with a particular case of a forced excitation of a linear oscillatory system. The excitation is accompanied with a more or less fast amplitude growth, as the natural frequency of the oscillatory system coincides with (or sufficiently close to) that of external harmonic force. In turn, in the case of the so-called parametric resonance one should refer to some kind of comparativeness between the natural frequency and the frequency of the parametric excitation. So that, the resonances can be simply classified, according to the above outlined scheme, by their order, beginning from the number first

For a broad class of mechanical systems with stationary boundary conditions, a mathematical definition of the resonance follows from consideration of the average functions
(17)


where







are satisfied. Here






where









where








where







Notice, if the eigen value of

The resonant properties in most mechanical systems with time-depending boundary conditions cannot be diagnosed by using the function

Example 2. Consider the equations (4) with the boundary conditions






are satisfied. At the same time the first-order resonance, experienced by the longitudinal wave at the frequency

References
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2.Kaup P. J., Reiman A. and Bers A. Space-time evolution of nonlinear three-wave interactions. Interactions in a homogeneous medium, Rev. of Modern Phys., (1979) 51 (2), 275-309.
3.Kauderer H (1958), Nichtlineare Mechanik, Springer, Berlin.
4.Haken H. (1983), Advanced Synergetics. Instability Hierarchies of Self-Organizing Systems and devices, Berlin, Springer-Verlag.
5.Kovriguine DA, Potapov AI (1996), Nonlinear wave dynamics of 1D elastic structures, Izvestiya vuzov. Appl. Nonlinear Dynamics, 4 (2), 72-102 (in Russian).
6.Maslov VP (1973), Operator methods, Moscow, Nauka publisher (in Russian).
7.Jezequel L., Lamarque C. - H. Analysis of nonlinear dynamical systems by the normal form theory, J. of Sound and Vibrations, (1991) 149 (3), 429-459.
8.Pellicano F, Amabili M. and Vakakis AF (2000), Nonlinear vibration and multiple resonances of fluid-filled, circular shells, Part 2: Perturbation analysis, Vibration and Acoustics, 122, 355-364.
9.Zhuravlev VF and Klimov DM (1988), Applied methods in the theory of oscillations, Moscow, Nauka publisher (in Russian)