Nagi Elabbasi
Facebook Reality Labs
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Posted:
1 decade ago
4 nov. 2011, 23:39 UTC−4
You can to model the pendulum body with a stiff material, constraint part of it to a rigid connector point. Then fix the translation of that point, keep one rotation free, add gravitational body force and perform a transient analysis. Include geometric nonlinearity if you want to account for the effect of large pendulum angles.
Alternatively, you can implement the pendulum equation of motion directly using the equation based modeling capabilities of COMSOL!
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
You can to model the pendulum body with a stiff material, constraint part of it to a rigid connector point. Then fix the translation of that point, keep one rotation free, add gravitational body force and perform a transient analysis. Include geometric nonlinearity if you want to account for the effect of large pendulum angles.
Alternatively, you can implement the pendulum equation of motion directly using the equation based modeling capabilities of COMSOL!
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
5 nov. 2011, 05:01 UTC−4
Hi
probably the simplest is to use a euler beam (2D and 1 line to draw, then as Nagi said, attach one point but let rotations free, and add a virtual mass at the other end.
If you draw the line with an angle (parametris a rotation in the geoemtry) you can change the initial starting point. And with gravitational forces you have everything you need ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
probably the simplest is to use a euler beam (2D and 1 line to draw, then as Nagi said, attach one point but let rotations free, and add a virtual mass at the other end.
If you draw the line with an angle (parametris a rotation in the geoemtry) you can change the initial starting point. And with gravitational forces you have everything you need ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar