FeX32
Mechanical
- Jan 11, 2009
- 2,055
Hello Gents,
Been a while since I posted here or commented. Good to see this useful set of minds is still very active.
I have a general questions I'd like to discuss and get some thoughts on.
Say I have a mass or inertia and it is being propelled by external forces. Then, it contacts/impacts a stationary mass/system (with it's own stiffness) at a known velocity - resulting in a dynamic impact event. However, there is a remaining force acting on the force before and still there during the impact. Eg. a force holding the mass up against the stationary system (after the impact event also). However, because this force is present during the impact the total energy (or power?) is not the same as if it were not there.
So, I've been posturing the simplest way to derive an analytical relation that can illustrate the contribution to the impact event that varying this force has (while keeping the impact velocity the same).
My end result is a relation that can help understand directionally how to reduce the resulting vibration the impact has on the structure it contacts - which I'm assuming will reduce the resulting noise emitted from it.
I've also made these general hypotheses:
a) keeping the energy the same - varying the time between 2 impact events changes the power input and the mode shapes the impact will excite (fast high power event will excite more and higher frequencies) (Is there any way to easily show this analytically?)
b) damping present upon impact is only internal friction of strained elements - and any energy dissipated due to damping follows coulomb (or any modern variation of it)
Thanks for the help and thoughts!
Been a while since I posted here or commented. Good to see this useful set of minds is still very active.
I have a general questions I'd like to discuss and get some thoughts on.
Say I have a mass or inertia and it is being propelled by external forces. Then, it contacts/impacts a stationary mass/system (with it's own stiffness) at a known velocity - resulting in a dynamic impact event. However, there is a remaining force acting on the force before and still there during the impact. Eg. a force holding the mass up against the stationary system (after the impact event also). However, because this force is present during the impact the total energy (or power?) is not the same as if it were not there.
So, I've been posturing the simplest way to derive an analytical relation that can illustrate the contribution to the impact event that varying this force has (while keeping the impact velocity the same).
My end result is a relation that can help understand directionally how to reduce the resulting vibration the impact has on the structure it contacts - which I'm assuming will reduce the resulting noise emitted from it.
I've also made these general hypotheses:
a) keeping the energy the same - varying the time between 2 impact events changes the power input and the mode shapes the impact will excite (fast high power event will excite more and higher frequencies) (Is there any way to easily show this analytically?)
b) damping present upon impact is only internal friction of strained elements - and any energy dissipated due to damping follows coulomb (or any modern variation of it)
Thanks for the help and thoughts!