40 research outputs found
Stability of Zeno Equilibria in Lagrangian Hybrid Systems
This paper presents both necessary and sufficient
conditions for the stability of Zeno equilibria in Lagrangian hybrid systems, i.e., hybrid systems modeling mechanical systems undergoing impacts. These conditions for stability are motivated by the sufficient conditions for Zeno behavior in Lagrangian hybrid systems obtained in [11]—we show that the same conditions that imply the existence of Zeno behavior near Zeno equilibria imply the stability of the Zeno equilibria. This paper, therefore, not only presents conditions for the stability of Zeno equilibria, but directly relates the stability of Zeno equilibria to the existence of Zeno behavior
Dynamics and Stability of Low-Reynolds-Number Swimming Near a Wall
The locomotion of microorganisms and tiny artificial swimmers is governed by low-Reynolds-number
hydrodynamics, where viscous effects dominate and inertial effects are negligible. While the theory
of low-Reynolds-number locomotion is well studied for unbounded fluid domains, the presence of a
boundary has a significant influence on the swimmer’s trajectories and poses problems of dynamic
stability of its motion. In this paper we consider a simple theoretical model of a microswimmer near
a wall, study its dynamics, and analyze the stability of its motion. We highlight the underlying
geometric structure of the dynamics, and establish a relation between the reversing symmetry of
the system and existence and stability of periodic and steady solutions of motion near the wall.
The results are demonstrated by numerical simulations and validated by motion experiments with
macroscale robotic swimmer prototypes
Formal and practical completion of Lagrangian hybrid systems
This paper presents a method for completing
Lagrangian hybrid systems models in a formal manner. That
is, given a Lagrangian hybrid system, i.e., a hybrid system that
models a mechanical system undergoing impacts, we present
a systematic method in which to extend executions of this
system past Zeno points by adding an additional domain to
the hybrid model. Moreover, by utilizing results that provide
sufficient conditions for Zeno behavior and for stability of Zeno
equilibria in Lagrangian hybrid systems, we are able to give
explicit bounds on the error incurred through the practical
simulation of these completed hybrid system models. These
ideas are illustrated on a series of examples, and are shown
to be consistent with observed reality
Stability and Completion of Zeno Equilibria in Lagrangian Hybrid Systems
This paper studies Lagrangian hybrid systems, which are a special class of hybrid systems modeling mechanical systems with unilateral constraints that are undergoing impacts. This class of systems naturally display Zeno behavior-an infinite number of discrete transitions that occur in finite time, leading to the convergence of solutions to limit sets called Zeno equilibria. This paper derives simple conditions for stability of Zeno equilibria. Utilizing these results and the constructive techniques used to prove them, the paper introduces the notion of a completed hybrid system which is an extended hybrid system model allowing for the extension of solutions beyond Zeno points. A procedure for practical simulation of completed hybrid systems is outlined, and conditions guaranteeing upper bounds on the incurred numerical error are derived. Finally, we discuss an application of these results to the stability of unilaterally constrained motion of mechanical systems under perturbations that violate the constraint
Nonlinear dynamics and bifurcations of a planar undulating magnetic microswimmer
Swimming micro-organisms such as flagellated bacteria and sperm cells have
fascinating locomotion capabilities. Inspired by their natural motion, there is
an ongoing effort to develop artificial robotic nano-swimmers for potential
in-body biomedical applications. A leading method for actuation of
nano-swimmers is by applying a time-varying external magnetic field. Such
systems have rich and nonlinear dynamics that calls for simple fundamental
models. A previous work studied forward motion of a simple two-link model with
passive elastic joint, assuming small-amplitude planar oscillations of the
magnetic field about a constant direction. In this work, we found that there
exists a faster, backward motion of the swimmer with very rich dynamics. By
relaxing the small-amplitude assumption, we analyze the multiplicity of
periodic solutions, as well as their bifurcations, symmetry breaking, and
stability transitions. We have also found that the net displacement and/or mean
swimming speed are maximized for optimal choices of various parameters.
Asymptotic calculations are performed for the bifurcation condition and the
swimmer's mean speed. The results may enable significantly improving the design
aspects of magnetically-actuated robotic microswimmer.Comment: version 3, revised and resubmitted for review as journal publicatio