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Rigid connector as rotation sensor
Posted 31.01.2014, 07:23 GMT-5 Studies & Solvers, Structural Mechanics 1 Reply
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Hello,
I'm trying to use the rigid connector as an angle sensor, but I'm having troubles interpreting the values.
In my case I have a 3D solid mechanics simulation of an object, and I apply a rigid connector constraint to one surface. The "rigidization" of the surface is not a problem for me, since that face is indeed mostly rigid. Additionally, I constraint the rotations around 2 axes (x and z), so that the surface is now only allowed to rotate around y axis. Since my case only allows rotation around Y axis, what I'm hoping to obtain is a number representing the angle I'm rotating around that axis (I know that rotations around more axes become quite complex to understand, but my case should be simpler since is only around Y). And my problem is that I'm unable to extract that number from the simulation.
I run an eigenfrequency analysis, and I can see in the global evaluation that it is possible to access both the "rotation vector" and the "rotation matrix". I also notice that the displacements for each mode are quite large relative to the size of the structure (I'm using mass normalization and it is a light structure), and therefore the angle that I'm looking for is near 90 degrees (I can see that in a deformed shape with scale factor 1).
In the rotation vector, I only have non-zero values on direction Y, but they are complex numbers. for instance:
Eigenfrequency Rotation vector, y component (rad)
11.26198 -6.28319+44.13022i
I also tried looking into the terms of the rotation matrix. According to wikipedia, the rotation matrix of a elementary rotation around Y should look like: upload.wikimedia.org/math/2/8/5/2851c9dc2031127e6dacfb84b96446d8.png. I do see the inner cross of 1 and zeros, but the corner positions are not clear. The (x,x) and (z,z) positions are always 1, which is strange since that position is supposed to be cos(tetha), and tetha is almost 90 (I evaluated those with solid.rotzZ_rig1 and equivalents for other DOFs). Also, I checked (x,z) and (z,x) positions and they have large values (like 1.2e5), which is estrange since those are supposed to be sines of an angle.
So, all in all, I don't know how to extract the angle out of the global evaluations.
Any idea?
I'm trying to use the rigid connector as an angle sensor, but I'm having troubles interpreting the values.
In my case I have a 3D solid mechanics simulation of an object, and I apply a rigid connector constraint to one surface. The "rigidization" of the surface is not a problem for me, since that face is indeed mostly rigid. Additionally, I constraint the rotations around 2 axes (x and z), so that the surface is now only allowed to rotate around y axis. Since my case only allows rotation around Y axis, what I'm hoping to obtain is a number representing the angle I'm rotating around that axis (I know that rotations around more axes become quite complex to understand, but my case should be simpler since is only around Y). And my problem is that I'm unable to extract that number from the simulation.
I run an eigenfrequency analysis, and I can see in the global evaluation that it is possible to access both the "rotation vector" and the "rotation matrix". I also notice that the displacements for each mode are quite large relative to the size of the structure (I'm using mass normalization and it is a light structure), and therefore the angle that I'm looking for is near 90 degrees (I can see that in a deformed shape with scale factor 1).
In the rotation vector, I only have non-zero values on direction Y, but they are complex numbers. for instance:
Eigenfrequency Rotation vector, y component (rad)
11.26198 -6.28319+44.13022i
I also tried looking into the terms of the rotation matrix. According to wikipedia, the rotation matrix of a elementary rotation around Y should look like: upload.wikimedia.org/math/2/8/5/2851c9dc2031127e6dacfb84b96446d8.png. I do see the inner cross of 1 and zeros, but the corner positions are not clear. The (x,x) and (z,z) positions are always 1, which is strange since that position is supposed to be cos(tetha), and tetha is almost 90 (I evaluated those with solid.rotzZ_rig1 and equivalents for other DOFs). Also, I checked (x,z) and (z,x) positions and they have large values (like 1.2e5), which is estrange since those are supposed to be sines of an angle.
So, all in all, I don't know how to extract the angle out of the global evaluations.
Any idea?
1 Reply Last Post 04.02.2014, 11:23 GMT-5