Difference between revisions of "Matlab Primer"

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:<math>\ddot\theta + \frac{\ddot x}{\ell} \cos\theta + \frac{g}{\ell} \sin\theta = 0.\, </math>
 
:<math>\ddot\theta + \frac{\ddot x}{\ell} \cos\theta + \frac{g}{\ell} \sin\theta = 0.\, </math>
  
See [[Wikipedia|http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lagrangian_mechanics&oldid=516894618]] for a full derivation.
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See [Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lagrangian_mechanics&oldid=516894618] for a full derivation.

Revision as of 17:48, 3 November 2012

Today's lecture will be on MATLAB and PENDULA (plural of PENDULUM). Your next lab assignment motivated the topic.

My name is Sean Carver; I am a research scientist in Mechanical Engineering. I have been programming in MATLAB for almost 20 years and programming computers for almost 30 years.

This class is about MATLAB, not about deriving equations. So I am just going to give you the equations for the PENDULUM. There is still a lot to do to get it into MATLAB.

Pendulum on a movable support

This example comes from Wikipedia (copied legally). Consider a pendulum of mass m and length , which is attached to a support with mass M which can move along a line in the x-direction. Let x be the coordinate along the line of the support, and let us denote the position of the pendulum by the angle θ from the vertical.

Sketch of the situation with definition of the coordinates (click to enlarge)
\ddot\theta + \frac{\ddot x}{\ell} \cos\theta + \frac{g}{\ell} \sin\theta = 0.\,

See [Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lagrangian_mechanics&oldid=516894618] for a full derivation.