Loading…

Noncharacteristic Evolution of a Nonlinear Elastic Single Cylindrical Wave

The evolution of a nonlinear elastic cylindrical displacement wave is analyzed theoretically and numerically using the five-constant Murnaghan model for a noncharacteristic initial profile in the form of the Macdonald function. Unlike most nonlinear waves in materials that have periodical or single...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:International applied mechanics 2021-11, Vol.57 (6), p.619-634
Main Authors: Rushchytsky, J. J., Yurchuk, V. M., Hryhorchuk, O. M., Symchuk, Ya. V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The evolution of a nonlinear elastic cylindrical displacement wave is analyzed theoretically and numerically using the five-constant Murnaghan model for a noncharacteristic initial profile in the form of the Macdonald function. Unlike most nonlinear waves in materials that have periodical or single humps, this wave has no hump. It monotonically decreases and has a profile concaved downward. The basic novelty of this research is that the evolution of waves is studied using approximate methods and considering the first three approximations. Some essential distinctions of this wave are shown: the noncharacteristic profile evolves in a noncharacteristic way. First, the peculiarities of three types of waves (a harmonic wave (periodically repeated profile) and two single waves with the initial profiles in the form of the Gauss function (symmetric profile) and the Whittaker function (nonsymmetric profile)), which may be considered characteristic properties, are briefly described. Further, a single wave with the initial profile in the form of the Macdonald function is analyzed in detail, both theoretically and numerically. The initial profile distortion caused by the nonlinear interaction of the wave and the decrease in the maximum amplitude during the wave propagation are common to these profiles. Significant features of the Macdonald wave are shown: the noncharacteristic initial profile (without a classical hump) evolves in a noncharacteristic way, as the profile becomes much (soft nonlinearity) or less (hard nonlinearity) steeper, has no hump, and remains convex downward.
ISSN:1063-7095
1573-8582
DOI:10.1007/s10778-022-01112-x