Kapitza Pendulum
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Kapitza's pendulum or Kapitza pendulum is a rigid pendulum in which the pivot point vibrates in a vertical direction, up and down. It is named after Russian
Nobel laureate The Nobel Prizes ( sv, Nobelpriset, no, Nobelprisen) are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Swedish Academy, the Karolinska Institutet, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals and organizations who make out ...
physicist
Pyotr Kapitza Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa or Peter Kapitza (Russian: Пётр Леонидович Капица, Romanian: Petre Capița ( – 8 April 1984) was a leading Soviet physicist and Nobel laureate, best known for his work in low-temperature physics ...
, who in 1951 developed a theory which successfully explains some of its unusual properties.; The unique feature of the Kapitza pendulum is that the vibrating suspension can cause it to balance stably in an inverted position, with the bob above the suspension point. In the usual pendulum with a fixed suspension, the only stable equilibrium position is with the bob hanging below the suspension point; the inverted position is a point of unstable equilibrium, and the smallest perturbation moves the pendulum out of equilibrium. In
nonlinear control theory Nonlinear control theory is the area of control theory which deals with systems that are nonlinear, time-variant, or both. Control theory is an interdisciplinary branch of engineering and mathematics that is concerned with the behavior of dyn ...
the Kapitza pendulum is used as an example of a parametric oscillator that demonstrates the concept of "dynamic stabilization". The pendulum was first described by A. Stephenson in 1908, who found that the upper vertical position of the pendulum might be stable when the driving frequency is fast. Yet until the 1950s there was no explanation for this highly unusual and counterintuitive phenomenon. Pyotr Kapitza was the first to analyze it in 1951. He carried out a number of experimental studies and as well provided an analytical insight into the reasons of stability by splitting the motion into "fast" and "slow" variables and by introducing an effective potential. This innovative work created a new subject in physics – vibrational mechanics. Kapitza's method is used for description of periodic processes in
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, plasma physics and
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. The effective potential which describes the "slow" component of motion is described in "Mechanics" volume (§30) of Landau's '' Course of Theoretical Physics''. Another interesting feature of the Kapitza pendulum system is that the bottom equilibrium position, with the pendulum hanging down below the pivot, is no longer stable. Any tiny deviation from the vertical increases in amplitude with time.
Parametric resonance A parametric oscillator is a driven harmonic oscillator in which the oscillations are driven by varying some parameter of the system at some frequency, typically different from the natural frequency of the oscillator. A simple example of a param ...
can also occur in this position, and chaotic regimes can be realized in the system when
strange attractor In the mathematical field of dynamical systems, an attractor is a set of states toward which a system tends to evolve, for a wide variety of starting conditions of the system. System values that get close enough to the attractor values remain ...
s are present in the
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.


Notation

Denote the vertical axis as y and the horizontal axis as x so that the motion of pendulum happens in the (x-y) plane. The following notation will be used * \nu—frequency of the vertical oscillations of the suspension, * a — amplitude of the oscillations of the suspension, * \omega_0 = \sqrt — proper frequency of the mathematical pendulum, * g — free fall acceleration, * l — length of rigid and light pendulum, * m — mass. Denoting the angle between pendulum and downward direction as \varphi the time dependence of the position of pendulum gets written as : \begin x &= l \sin \varphi\\ y &= - l \cos \varphi - a \cos \nu t \end


Energy

The
potential energy In physics, potential energy is the energy held by an object because of its position relative to other objects, stresses within itself, its electric charge, or other factors. Common types of potential energy include the gravitational potentia ...
of the pendulum is due to gravity and is defined by, in terms of the vertical position, as : E_\mathrm = - m g (l \cos \varphi + a \cos \nu t). \, The kinetic energy in addition to the standard term E_\mathrm=m l^2 \dot \varphi^2 /2, describing velocity of a mathematical pendulum, there is a contribution due to vibrations of the suspension : E_\mathrm = \frac \dot \varphi^2 + m a l \nu ~\sin(\nu t) \sin(\varphi)~\dot\varphi + \frac \sin^2(\nu t)\;. The total energy is given by the sum of the kinetic and potential energies E = E_\mathrm + E_\mathrm and the
Lagrangian Lagrangian may refer to: Mathematics * Lagrangian function, used to solve constrained minimization problems in optimization theory; see Lagrange multiplier ** Lagrangian relaxation, the method of approximating a difficult constrained problem with ...
by their difference L = E_\mathrm - E_\mathrm. The total energy is conserved in a mathematical pendulum, so time t dependence of the potential E_\mathrm and kinetic E_\mathrm energies is symmetric with respect to the horizontal line. According to the virial theorem the mean kinetic and potential energies in harmonic oscillator are equal. This means that the line of symmetry corresponds to half of the total energy. In the case of vibrating suspension the system is no longer a closed one and the total energy is no longer conserved. The kinetic energy is more sensitive to vibration compared to the potential one. The potential energy E_\mathrm = mgy is bound from below and above -mg(l+a) while the kinetic energy is bound only from below E_\mathrm\ge 0. For high frequency of vibrations \nu the kinetic energy can be large compared to the potential energy.


Equations of motion

Motion of pendulum satisfies Euler–Lagrange equations. The dependence of the phase \varphi of the pendulum on its position satisfies the equation: : \frac \frac = \frac, where the Lagrangian L reads : L = \frac \dot \varphi^2 + ml( g + a~\nu^2\cos\nu t) \cos \varphi, up to irrelevant total time derivative terms. The differential equation : \ddot \varphi = - (g+a~\nu^2\cos\nu t) \frac, which describes the movement of the pendulum is nonlinear due to the \sin\varphi factor.


Equilibrium positions

Kapitza's pendulum model is more general than the simple pendulum. The Kapitza model reduces to the latter in the limit a = 0. In that limit, the tip of the pendulum describes a circle: x^2+y^2 = l^2 = \text. If the energy in the initial moment is larger than the maximum of the potential energy E > mgl then the trajectory will be closed and cyclic. If the initial energy is smaller E < mgl then the pendulum will oscillate close to the only stable point (x,y) = (0,-l). When the suspension is vibrating with a small amplitude a \ll l and with a frequency \nu\gg \omega_0 much higher than the proper frequency \omega_0, the angle \varphi may be viewed as a superposition \varphi=\varphi_0+\xi of a "slow" component \varphi_0 and a rapid oscillation \xi with small amplitude due to the small but rapid vibrations of the suspension. Technically, we perform a
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expansion in the "
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s" (a/l),(\omega_0/\nu) \ll 1 while treating the ratio (a/l)(\nu/\omega_0) as fixed. The perturbative treatment becomes exact in the
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a \to 0 ,\nu\to \infty. More precisely, the rapid oscillation \xi is defined as : \xi = \frac\sin\varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t. \, The equation of motion for the "slow" component \varphi_0 becomes : \begin \ddot\varphi_0 = \ddot\varphi - \ddot\xi &= -(g+a~\nu^2\cos\nu t)\frac \\ & \quad - \frac\left(\ddot\varphi_0 \cos \varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t -\dot\varphi_0^2\sin\varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t - 2\nu\dot\varphi_0\cos\varphi_0~\sin\nu t - \nu^2\sin \varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t \right) \\ pt &= -\frac\sin\varphi_0 -(g+a~\nu^2\cos\nu t) \frac\left(\xi\cos\varphi_0 + O(\xi^2)\right) \\ & \quad - \frac\left( \ddot\varphi_0 \cos\varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t -\dot\varphi_0^2\sin\varphi_0 ~\cos\nu t - 2\nu\dot\varphi_0\cos\varphi_0~\sin\nu t \right). \end Time-averaging over the rapid \nu-oscillation yields to leading order : \ddot \varphi_0 = - \frac\sin \varphi_0 - \frac\left(\frac\right)^2\sin \varphi_0 \cos \varphi_0. The "slow" equation of motion becomes : m l^2\ddot \varphi_0 = -\frac \;, by introducing an effective potential : V_ = - mgl \cos \varphi_0 + m \left(\frac\sin \varphi_0\right)^2. It turns out that the effective potential V_ has two minima if (a\nu)^2 > 2gl , or equivalently, (a/l)(\nu/\omega_0) > \sqrt . The first minimum is in the same position (x,y)=(0,-l) as the mathematical pendulum and the other minimum is in the upper vertical position (x,y)=(0,l). As a result the upper vertical position, which is unstable in a mathematical pendulum, can become stable in Kapitza's pendulum.


Rotating solutions

The rotating solutions of the Kapitza's pendulum occur when the pendulum rotates around the pivot point at the same frequency that the pivot point is driven. There are two rotating solutions, one for a rotation in each direction. We shift to the rotating reference frame using \varphi \rightarrow \varphi^ \pm \nu t and the equation for \varphi becomes: : \ddot \varphi^ = -\frac \left \fraca \nu^ \sin(\varphi^) + g\sin(\varphi^ \pm \nu t) + \fraca \nu^ \sin(\varphi^ \pm 2\nu t) \right\;. Again considering the limit in which \nu is much higher than the proper frequency \omega_0, we find that the rapid-\nu slow-\varphi_0^ limit leads to the equation: : \ddot \varphi_0^ = -\frac a \nu^2 \sin\varphi_0^ \;. The effective potential is just that of a simple pendulum equation. There is a stable equilibrium at \varphi_0^ = 0 and an unstable equilibrium at \varphi_0^ = \pi.


Phase portrait

Interesting phase portraits might be obtained in regimes which are not accessible within analytic descriptions, for example in the case of large amplitude of the suspension a \approx l. Increasing the amplitude of driving oscillations to half of the pendulum length a = l/2 leads to the phase portrait shown in the figure. Further increase of the amplitude to a\approx l leads to full filling of the internal points of the phase space: if before some points of the phase space were not accessible, now system can reach any of the internal points. This situation holds also for larger values of a.


Interesting facts

* Kapitza noted that a pendulum clock with a vibrating pendulum suspension always goes faster than a clock with a fixed suspension. * Walking is defined by an 'inverted pendulum' gait in which the body vaults over the stiff limb or limbs with each step. Increased stability during walking might be related to stability of Kapitza's pendulum. This applies regardless of the number of limbs - even arthropods with six, eight or more limbs.


Literature


External links

* Demonstration video a
Kapitza's Pendulum - YouTubeInteractive demonstration
at Wolfram Demonstrations Project {{DEFAULTSORT:Kapitza's Pendulum Pendulums