311 research outputs found
Rocking and rolling: a can that appears to rock might actually roll
A beer bottle or soda can on a table, when slightly tipped and released,
falls to an upright position and then rocks up to a somewhat opposite tilt.
Superficially this rocking motion involves a collision when the flat circular
base of the container slaps the table before rocking up to the opposite tilt. A
keen eye notices that the after-slap rising tilt is not generally just
diametrically opposite the initial tilt but is veered to one side or the other.
Cushman and Duistermaat (2006) recently noticed such veering when a flat disk
with rolling boundary conditions is dropped nearly flat. Here, we generalize
these rolling disk results to arbitrary axi-symmetric bodies and to
frictionless sliding. More specifically, we study motions that almost but do
not quite involve a face-down collision of the round container's bottom with
the table-top. These motions involve a sudden rapid motion of the contact point
around the circular base. Surprisingly, like for the rolling disk, the net
angle of motion of this contact point is nearly independent of initial
conditions. This angle of turn depends simply on the geometry and mass
distribution but not on the moment of inertia about the symmetry axis. We
derive simple asymptotic formulas for this "angle of turn" of the contact point
and check the result with numerics and with simple experiments. For tall
containers (height much bigger than radius) the angle of turn is just over
and the sudden rolling motion superficially appears as a nearly symmetric
collision leading to leaning on an almost diametrically opposite point on the
bottom rim.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Prediction of stable walking for a toy that cannot stand
Previous experiments [M. J. Coleman and A. Ruina, Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 3658
(1998)] showed that a gravity-powered toy with no control and which has no
statically stable near-standing configurations can walk stably. We show here
that a simple rigid-body statically-unstable mathematical model based loosely
on the physical toy can predict stable limit-cycle walking motions. These
calculations add to the repertoire of rigid-body mechanism behaviors as well as
further implicating passive-dynamics as a possible contributor to stability of
animal motions.Comment: Note: only corrections so far have been fixing typo's in these
comments. 3 pages, 2 eps figures, uses epsf.tex, revtex.sty, amsfonts.sty,
aps.sty, aps10.sty, prabib.sty; Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E.
4/9/2001 ; information about Andy Ruina's lab (including Coleman's, Garcia's
and Ruina's other publications and associated video clips) can be found at:
http://www.tam.cornell.edu/~ruina/hplab/index.html and more about Georg
Bock's Simulation Group with whom Katja Mombaur is affiliated can be found at
http://www.iwr.uni-heidelberg.de/~agboc
Unified Description of Aging and Rate Effects in Yield of Glassy Solids
The competing effects of slow structural relaxations (aging) and deformation
at constant strain rate on the shear yield stress of simple model
glasses are examined using molecular simulations. At long times, aging leads to
a logarithmic increase in density and . The yield stress also rises
logarithmically with rate, but shows a sharp transition in slope at a rate that
decreases with increasing age. We present a simple phenomenological model that
includes both intrinsic rate dependence and the change in properties with the
total age of the system at yield. As predicted by the model, all data for each
temperature collapse onto a universal curve.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Rate- and State-Dependent Friction Law and Statistical Properties of Earthquakes
In order to clarify how the statistical properties of earthquakes depend on
the constitutive law characterizing the stick-slip dynamics, we make an
extensive numerical simulation of the one-dimensional spring-block model with
the rate- and state-dependent friction law. Both the magnitude distribution and
the recurrence-time distribution are studied with varying the constitutive
parameters characterizing the model. While a continuous spectrum of seismic
events from smaller to larger magnitudes is obtained, earthquakes described by
this model turn out to possess pronounced ``characteristic'' features.Comment: Minor revisions are made in the text and in the figures. Accepted for
publication in Europhys. Letter
Memory in Self Organized Criticality
Many natural phenomena exhibit power law behaviour in the distribution of
event size. This scaling is successfully reproduced by Self Organized
Criticality (SOC). On the other hand, temporal occurrence in SOC models has a
Poisson-like statistics, i.e. exponential behaviour in the inter-event time
distribution, in contrast with experimental observations. We present a SOC
model with memory: events are nucleated not only as a consequence of the
instantaneous value of the local field with respect to the firing threshold,
but on the basis of the whole history of the system. The model is able to
reproduce the complex behaviour of inter-event time distribution, in excellent
agreement with experimental seismic data
Experimental Validation of Contact Dynamics for In-Hand Manipulation
This paper evaluates state-of-the-art contact models at predicting the
motions and forces involved in simple in-hand robotic manipulations. In
particular it focuses on three primitive actions --linear sliding, pivoting,
and rolling-- that involve contacts between a gripper, a rigid object, and
their environment. The evaluation is done through thousands of controlled
experiments designed to capture the motion of object and gripper, and all
contact forces and torques at 250Hz. We demonstrate that a contact modeling
approach based on Coulomb's friction law and maximum energy principle is
effective at reasoning about interaction to first order, but limited for making
accurate predictions. We attribute the major limitations to 1) the
non-uniqueness of force resolution inherent to grasps with multiple hard
contacts of complex geometries, 2) unmodeled dynamics due to contact
compliance, and 3) unmodeled geometries dueto manufacturing defects.Comment: International Symposium on Experimental Robotics, ISER 2016, Tokyo,
Japa
The Work of Seduction : Intimacy and Subjectivity in the London 'Seduction Community'
This paper explores negotiations of intimate and sexual subjectivity among men involved in the London 'seduction community', a central locus within what is more properly regarded as a community-industry. Herein, heterosexual men undertake various forms of skills training and personal development in order to gain greater choice and control in their relationships with women. As an entry point to this discussion I consider the international media event that enveloped American 'pickup artist' Julien Blanc in November 2014. Shifting focus away from the cultural figure of the 'pickup artist' and onto socially located men, I attempt to complicate a dominant narrative that characterises men who participate in this community-industry as pathetic, pathological or perverse. This analysis makes use of extensive ethnographic research undertaken within the London seduction community, and examines how men who participate in this setting engage a mode of intimate and sexual subjectivity ordered by themes of management and enterprise. Ultimately I argue that the central logics of the seduction community are not dissonant from but are in fact consistent with broader reconfigurations of intimacy and sexuality taking place in the contemporary UK context
Towards Landslide Predictions: Two Case Studies
In a previous work [Helmstetter, 2003], we have proposed a simple physical
model to explain the accelerating displacements preceding some catastrophic
landslides, based on a slider-block model with a state and velocity dependent
friction law. This model predicts two regimes of sliding, stable and unstable
leading to a critical finite-time singularity. This model was calibrated
quantitatively to the displacement and velocity data preceding two landslides,
Vaiont (Italian Alps) and La Clapi\`ere (French Alps), showing that the former
(resp. later) landslide is in the unstable (resp. stable) sliding regime. Here,
we test the predictive skills of the state-and-velocity-dependent model on
these two landslides, using a variety of techniques. For the Vaiont landslide,
our model provides good predictions of the critical time of failure up to 20
days before the collapse. Tests are also presented on the predictability of the
time of the change of regime for la Clapi\`ere landslide.Comment: 30 pages with 12 eps figure
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