likearock
Mechanical
- Apr 20, 2012
- 2
I have been pondering on something all day and have been unable to track down any helpful literature on my particular problem. Suppose for the sake of simplicity you have an infinitely long steel cylindrical rod (say 5" in diameter)suspended in a vacuum (or neglecting all interaction with the surroundings). Now suppose one end of this rod is struck creating a shock/vibrational wave with a known amplitude at Xn and known corresponding harmonic amplitudes at Xn as well as the frequency. Is there a way to theoretically calculate the attenuation of said wave or corresponding amplitude of said wave after traveling distances of Xn+1, Xn+2, etc. I assume this would have to be related to some type of attenuation coefficient of steel (which I can't find). Particularly I'm interested in the reading I would see from an accelerometer placed 1 m from the wave point of origin vs. say 2000m from the point of origin. Whats your thoughts?