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The swinging Atwood's machine (SAM) is a mechanism that resembles a simple Atwood's machine except that one of the masses is allowed to
swing Swing or swinging may refer to: Apparatus * Swing (seat), a hanging seat that swings back and forth * Pendulum, an object that swings * Russian swing, a swing-like circus apparatus * Sex swing, a type of harness for sexual intercourse * Swing rid ...
in a two-dimensional plane, producing a
dynamical system In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a function describes the time dependence of a point in an ambient space. Examples include the mathematical models that describe the swinging of a clock pendulum, the flow of water i ...
that is
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for some system parameters and initial conditions. Specifically, it comprises two masses (the pendulum, mass and counterweight, mass ) connected by an inextensible, massless string suspended on two frictionless pulleys of zero radius such that the pendulum can swing freely around its pulley without colliding with the counterweight. The conventional Atwood's machine allows only "runaway" solutions (''i.e.'' either the pendulum or counterweight eventually collides with its pulley), except for M=m. However, the swinging Atwood's machine with M>m has a large parameter space of conditions that lead to a variety of motions that can be classified as terminating or non-terminating, periodic, quasiperiodic or chaotic, bounded or unbounded, singular or non-singular due to the pendulum's
reactive centrifugal force In classical mechanics, a reactive centrifugal force forms part of an action–reaction pair with a centripetal force. In accordance with Newton's first law of motion, an object moves in a straight line in the absence of a net force acting on th ...
counteracting the counterweight's weight. Research on the SAM started as part of a 1982 senior thesis entitled ''Smiles and Teardrops'' (referring to the shape of some trajectories of the system) by Nicholas Tufillaro at Reed College, directed by
David J. Griffiths David Jeffrey Griffiths (born December 5, 1942) is an American physicist and educator. He worked at Reed College from 1978 through 2009, becoming the Howard Vollum Professor of Science before his retirement. Biography Griffiths is a graduate o ...
.


Equations of motion

The swinging Atwood's machine is a system with two degrees of freedom. We may derive its equations of motion using either Hamiltonian mechanics or Lagrangian mechanics. Let the swinging mass be m and the non-swinging mass be M. The kinetic energy of the system, T, is: : \begin T &= \frac M v^2_M + \frac mv^2_m \\ &= \fracM \dot^2+\frac m \left(\dot^2+r^2\dot^2\right) \end where r is the distance of the swinging mass to its pivot, and \theta is the angle of the swinging mass relative to pointing straight downwards. The potential energy U is solely due to the acceleration due to gravity: : \begin U &= Mgr - mgr \cos \end We may then write down the Lagrangian, \mathcal, and the Hamiltonian, \mathcal of the system: : \begin \mathcal &= T-U\\ &= \fracM \dot^2+\frac m \left(\dot^2+r^2\dot^2\right) - Mgr + mgr \cos\\ \mathcal &= T+U\\ &= \fracM \dot^2+\frac m \left(\dot^2+r^2\dot^2\right) + Mgr - mgr \cos \end We can then express the Hamiltonian in terms of the canonical momenta, p_r, p_\theta: : \begin p_r &= \frac = \frac = (M+m)\dot\\ p_\theta &= \frac = \frac = mr^2 \dot\\ \therefore \mathcal &= \frac + \frac + Mgr - mgr \cos \end Lagrange analysis can be applied to obtain two second-order coupled ordinary differential equations in r and \theta. First, the \theta equation: : \begin \frac &= \frac \left(\frac\right)\\ -mgr \sin &= 2mr \dot\dot + mr^2 \ddot\\ r\ddot + 2\dot\dot + g\sin &= 0 \end And the r equation: : \begin \frac &= \frac \left( \frac\right)\\ mr\dot^2 - Mg + mg\cos &= (M+m) \ddot \end We simplify the equations by defining the mass ratio \mu = \frac. The above then becomes: :(\mu+1)\ddot - r\dot^2 + g(\mu - \cos) = 0 Hamiltonian analysis may also be applied to determine four first order ODEs in terms of r, \theta and their corresponding canonical momenta p_r and p_\theta: : \begin \dot&=\frac = \frac \\ \dot &= - \frac = \frac - Mg + mg\cos \\ \dot&=\frac = \frac \\ \dot &= - \frac = -mgr\sin \end Notice that in both of these derivations, if one sets \theta and angular velocity \dot to zero, the resulting special case is the regular non-swinging Atwood machine: :\ddot = g \frac=g\frac The swinging Atwood's machine has a four-dimensional
phase space In dynamical system theory, a phase space is a space in which all possible states of a system are represented, with each possible state corresponding to one unique point in the phase space. For mechanical systems, the phase space usually ...
defined by r, \theta and their corresponding canonical momenta p_r and p_\theta. However, due to energy conservation, the phase space is constrained to three dimensions.


System with massive pulleys

If the pulleys in the system are taken to have
moment of inertia The moment of inertia, otherwise known as the mass moment of inertia, angular mass, second moment of mass, or most accurately, rotational inertia, of a rigid body is a quantity that determines the torque needed for a desired angular acceler ...
I and radius R, the Hamiltonian of the SAM is then: :\mathcal\left(r, \theta, \dot, \dot \right) = \underbrace_ + \underbrace_, Where t is the effective total mass of the system, :M_t = M + m + \frac This reduces to the version above when R and I become zero. The equations of motion are now: :\begin \mu_t ( \ddot - R \ddot) & = r \dot^2 + g (\cos - \mu ) \\ r \ddot & = - 2 \dot \dot + R \dot^2 - g \sin \\ \end where \mu_t = M_t / m.


Integrability

Hamiltonian systems can be classified as integrable and nonintegrable. SAM is integrable when the mass ratio \mu = M/m = 3. The system also looks pretty regular for \mu = 4 n^2 - 1 = 3, 15, 35, ..., but the \mu = 3 case is the only known integrable mass ratio. It has been shown that the system is not integrable for \mu \in (0,1) \cup (3,\infty). For many other values of the mass ratio (and initial conditions) SAM displays chaotic motion. Numerical studies indicate that when the orbit is singular (initial conditions: r=0, \dot=v, \theta=\theta_0, \dot=0), the pendulum executes a single symmetrical loop and returns to the origin, regardless of the value of \theta_0. When \theta_0 is small (near vertical), the trajectory describes a "teardrop", when it is large, it describes a "heart". These trajectories can be exactly solved algebraically, which is unusual for a system with a non-linear Hamiltonian.


Trajectories

The swinging mass of the swinging Atwood's machine undergoes interesting trajectories or orbits when subject to different initial conditions, and for different mass ratios. These include periodic orbits and collision orbits.


Nonsingular orbits

For certain conditions, system exhibits complex harmonic motion. The orbit is called nonsingular if the swinging mass does not touch the pulley.


Periodic orbits

When the different harmonic components in the system are in phase, the resulting trajectory is simple and periodic, such as the "smile" trajectory, which resembles that of an ordinary pendulum, and various loops. In general a periodic orbit exists when the following is satisfied: :r(t+\tau) = r(t),\, \theta(t+\tau) = \theta(t) The simplest case of periodic orbits is the "smile" orbit, which Tufillaro termed Type A orbits in his 1984 paper.


Singular orbits

The motion is singular if at some point, the swinging mass passes through the origin. Since the system is
invariant Invariant and invariance may refer to: Computer science * Invariant (computer science), an expression whose value doesn't change during program execution ** Loop invariant, a property of a program loop that is true before (and after) each iteratio ...
under time reversal and translation, it is equivalent to say that the pendulum starts at the origin and is fired outwards: :r(0) = 0 The region close to the pivot is singular, since r is close to zero and the equations of motion require dividing by r. As such, special techniques must be used to rigorously analyze these cases. The following are plots of arbitrarily selected singular orbits.


Collision orbits

Collision (or terminating singular) orbits are subset of singular orbits formed when the swinging mass is ejected from its pivot with an initial velocity, such that it returns to the pivot (i.e. it collides with the pivot): :r(\tau) = r(0) = 0, \, \tau > 0 The simplest case of collision orbits are the ones with a mass ratio of 3, which will always return symmetrically to the origin after being ejected from the origin, and were termed Type B orbits in Tufillaro's initial paper. They were also referred to as teardrop, heart, or rabbit-ear orbits because of their appearance. When the swinging mass returns to the origin, the counterweight mass, M must instantaneously change direction, causing an infinite tension in the connecting string. Thus we may consider the motion to terminate at this time.


Boundedness

For any initial position, it can be shown that the swinging mass is bounded by a curve that is a conic section. The pivot is always a focus of this bounding curve. The equation for this curve can be derived by analyzing the energy of the system, and using conservation of energy. Let us suppose that m is released from rest at r=r_0 and \theta=\theta_0. The total energy of the system is therefore: : E = \fracM \dot^2+\frac m \left(\dot^2+r^2\dot^2\right) + Mgr - mgr \cos = Mgr_0 - mgr_0 \cos However, notice that in the boundary case, the velocity of the swinging mass is zero. Hence we have: : Mgr - mgr \cos=Mgr_0 - mgr_0 \cos To see that it is the equation of a conic section, we isolate for r: : \begin r&=\frac\\ h&=r_0\left(1-\frac\right) \end Note that the numerator is a constant dependent only on the initial position in this case, as we have assumed the initial condition to be at rest. However, the energy constant h can also be calculated for nonzero initial velocity, and the equation still holds in all cases. The eccentricity of the conic section is \frac. For \mu>1, this is an ellipse, and the system is bounded and the swinging mass always stays within the ellipse. For \mu=1, it is a parabola and for \mu<1 it is a hyperbola; in either of these cases, it is not bounded. As \mu gets arbitrarily large, the bounding curve approaches a circle. The region enclosed by the curve is known as the Hill's region.


Recent three dimensional extension

A new integrable case for the problem of three dimensional Swinging Atwood Machine (3D-SAM) was announced in 2016. Like the 2D version, the problem is integrable when M = 3m.


References


Further reading

*Almeida, M.A., Moreira, I.C. and Santos, F.C. (1998) "On the Ziglin-Yoshida analysis for some classes of homogeneous hamiltonian systems", ''
Brazilian Journal of Physics The ''Brazilian Journal of Physics'' is a bimonthly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering all areas of physics. It is the official journal of the Brazilian Physical Society and is published on their behalf by Springer Science+Business Media. Th ...
'' Vol.28 n.4 São Paulo Dec. *Barrera, Emmanuel Jan (2003) ''Dynamics of a Double-Swinging Atwood's machine'', B.S. Thesis, National Institute of Physics, University of the Philippines. *Babelon, O, M. Talon, MC Peyranere (2010), "Kowalevski's analysis of a swinging Atwood's machine," Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical Vol. 43 (8). *Bruhn, B. (1987) "Chaos and order in weakly coupled systems of nonlinear oscillators," '' Physica Scripta'' Vol.35(1). *Casasayas, J., N. B. Tufillaro, and A. Nunes (1989) "Infinity manifold of a swinging Atwood's machine," '' European Journal of Physics'' Vol.10(10), p173. *Casasayas, J, A. Nunes, and N. B. Tufillaro (1990) "Swinging Atwood's machine: integrability and dynamics," '' Journal de Physique'' Vol.51, p1693. *Chowdhury, A. Roy and M. Debnath (1988) "Swinging Atwood Machine. Far- and near-resonance region", '' International Journal of Theoretical Physics'', Vol. 27(11), p1405-1410. *Griffiths D. J. and T. A. Abbott (1992) "Comment on ""A surprising mechanics demonstration,"" '' American Journal of Physics'' Vol.60(10), p951-953. *Moreira, I.C. and M.A. Almeida (1991) "Noether symmetries and the Swinging Atwood Machine", ''Journal of Physics'' II France 1, p711-715. *Nunes, A., J. Ca