WARose
Structural
- Mar 17, 2011
- 5,594
As I have mentioned on other threads on this board: I have been reading several texts on the propagation of elastic waves in isotropic media lately. (And I appreciate the discussions we’ve had here on this topic.) If I could prevail upon someone again……..a question crossed my mind this weekend………….
In a lot of the afore mentioned texts……equations defining the motion of a variety of wave types are given. (I.e. Rayleigh, lamb, P-wave, etc, etc.) But one thing I am noticing in a lot of them is: the amplitude is typically a undefined variable/constant. The only case I have seen it defined for (outside of longitudinal waves from axial impact) is in the case of Rayleigh waves. In one text I have (on soil dynamics), the motion was a function of a initial amplitude…..and that amplitude was a localized displacement from a vertical load.
So I guess my question is: is this true for other wave types? Are these undefined constants typically all some sort of a function of a local displacement/deformation……possibly do to contact?
By the way, this is not considering vibration.....this is just considering the initial wave at the beginning of motion.
Thanks in advance.
In a lot of the afore mentioned texts……equations defining the motion of a variety of wave types are given. (I.e. Rayleigh, lamb, P-wave, etc, etc.) But one thing I am noticing in a lot of them is: the amplitude is typically a undefined variable/constant. The only case I have seen it defined for (outside of longitudinal waves from axial impact) is in the case of Rayleigh waves. In one text I have (on soil dynamics), the motion was a function of a initial amplitude…..and that amplitude was a localized displacement from a vertical load.
So I guess my question is: is this true for other wave types? Are these undefined constants typically all some sort of a function of a local displacement/deformation……possibly do to contact?
By the way, this is not considering vibration.....this is just considering the initial wave at the beginning of motion.
Thanks in advance.