512,488 research outputs found
Biopolymer Elasticity
In recent years molecular elasticity has emerged as an active area of
research: there are experiments that probe mechanical properties of single
biomolecules such as DNA and Actin, with a view to understanding the role of
elasticity of these polymers in biological processes such as transcription and
protein-induced DNA bending. Single molecule elasticity has thus emerged as an
area where there is a rich cross-fertilization of ideas between biologists,
chemists and theoretical physicists. In this article we present a perspective
on this field of research
Relativistic Elasticity
Relativistic elasticity on an arbitrary spacetime is formulated as a
Lagrangian field theory which is covariant under spacetime diffeomorphisms.
This theory is the relativistic version of classical elasticity in the
hyperelastic, materially frame-indifferent case and, on Minkowski space,
reduces to the latter in the non-relativistic limit . The field equations are
cast into a first -- order symmetric hyperbolic system. As a consequence one
obtains local--in--time existence and uniqueness theorems under various
circumstances.Comment: 23 page
Rotational elasticity
We consider an infinite 3-dimensional elastic continuum whose material points
experience no displacements, only rotations. This framework is a special case
of the Cosserat theory of elasticity. Rotations of material points are
described mathematically by attaching to each geometric point an orthonormal
basis which gives a field of orthonormal bases called the coframe. As the
dynamical variables (unknowns) of our theory we choose the coframe and a
density. We write down the general dynamic variational functional for our
rotational theory of elasticity, assuming our material to be physically linear
but the kinematic model geometrically nonlinear. Allowing geometric
nonlinearity is natural when dealing with rotations because rotations in
dimension 3 are inherently nonlinear (rotations about different axes do not
commute) and because there is no reason to exclude from our study large
rotations such as full turns. The main result of the paper is an explicit
construction of a class of time-dependent solutions which we call plane wave
solutions; these are travelling waves of rotations. The existence of such
explicit closed form solutions is a nontrivial fact given that our system of
Euler-Lagrange equations is highly nonlinear. In the last section we consider a
special case of our rotational theory of elasticity which in the stationary
setting (harmonic time dependence and arbitrary dependence on spatial
coordinates) turns out to be equivalent to a pair of massless Dirac equations
Theory and computation of higher gradient elasticity theories based on action principles
In continuum mechanics, there exists a unique theory for elasticity, which includes the first gradient of displacement. The corresponding generalization of elasticity is referred to as strain gradient elasticity or higher gradient theories, where the second and higher gradients of displacement are involved. Unfortunately, there is a lack of consensus among scientists how to achieve the generalization. Various suggestions were made, in order to compare or even verify these, we need a generic computational tool. In this paper, we follow an unusual but quite convenient way of formulation based on action principles. First, in order to present its benefits, we start with the action principle leading to the well-known form of elasticity theory and present a variational formulation in order to obtain a weak form. Second, we generalize elasticity and point out, in which term the suggested formalism differs. By using the same approach, we obtain a weak form for strain gradient elasticity. The weak forms for elasticity and for strain gradient elasticity are solved numerically by using open-source packages—by using the finite element method in space and finite difference method in time. We present some applications from elasticity as well as strain gradient elasticity and simulate the so-called size effect
On Dislocations in a Special Class of Generalized Elasticity
In this paper we consider and compare special classes of static theories of
gradient elasticity, nonlocal elasticity, gradient micropolar elasticity and
nonlocal micropolar elasticity with only one gradient coefficient. Equilibrium
equations are discussed. The relationship between the gradient theory and the
nonlocal theory is discussed for elasticity as well as for micropolar
elasticity. Nonsingular solutions for the elastic fields of screw and edge
dislocations are given. Both the elastic deformation (distortion, strain,
bend-twist) and the force and couple stress tensors do not possess any
singularity unlike `classical' theories.Comment: 28 pages, to appear in: physica status solid
Reconstruction of interfaces from the elastic farfield measurements using CGO solutions
In this work, we are concerned with the inverse scattering by interfaces for
the linearized and isotropic elastic model at a fixed frequency. First, we
derive complex geometrical optic solutions with linear or spherical phases
having a computable dominant part and an -decaying remainder term
with , where is the classical Sobolev space. Second,
based on these properties, we estimate the convex hull as well as non convex
parts of the interface using the farfields of only one of the two reflected
body waves (pressure waves or shear waves) as measurements. The results are
given for both the impenetrable obstacles, with traction boundary conditions,
and the penetrable obstacles. In the analysis, we require the surfaces of the
obstacles to be Lipschitz regular and, for the penetrable obstacles, the Lam\'e
coefficients to be measurable and bounded with the usual jump conditions across
the interface.Comment: 32 page
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