This paper is concerned with the free vibration of a system with n degrees of freedom. It is shown that such a system always has n mutually orthogonal principal modes, whether the natural frequencies are all different or not. A method is described by means of which the modes and frequencies can be obtained one by one.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
RayleighLord1894‘The Theory of Sound’, second edition, vol. 1, Chapter 4 (MacMillan, London).
2.
BishopR. E. D.JohnsonD. C.1960‘The Mechanics of Vibration’, first edition (Cambridge University Press).
3.
LittlewoodD. E.1950‘A University Algebra’, first edition, pp. 52–54 (Heinemann).
4.
WeierstrassK.1894‘Collected Works’, vol. 1, p. 233 (Mayer and Müller, Berlin).
5.
JordanC.1872C.R. Acad. Sciences, Paris, vol. 74, p. 1395.
6.
WhittakerE. T.1937‘A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies’, fourth edition, pp. 179–183 (Cambridge University Press).
7.
FerrarW. L.1947Quart. J. Math., Oxford, vol. 18, p. 186.
8.
ToddJ. A.1947Quart. J. Math., Oxford, vol. 18, p. 183.
9.
FerrarW. L.1941‘Algebra,’first edition, pp. 32–33 (Oxford University Press).