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EML 5060 Analysis in Mechanical Engineering 12/9/97
Closed book Van Dommelen 5:30-7:30 pm

Show all reasoning and intermediate results leading to your answer. One book of mathematical tables, such as Schaum's Mathematical Handbook, may be used.

1.
The Laplace equation describes many important physical processes such as steady heat conduction, potential flows, electrostatic fields, etcetera. In order to solve the Laplace equation in two dimensions numerically, we might try to add an artificial time coordinate. Suppose we create the equation

\begin{displaymath}
u_{xx} + u_{yy} + 2\alpha u_{xt}+ 2\alpha u_{yt}+ \beta u_{t} = 1,\end{displaymath}

where $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are constants. What is the classification of this equation for various $\alpha$ and $\beta$? Solution
2.
Consider unsteady heat conduction in a bar of length $\pi$. Assume that the heat conduction coefficient $\kappa$ is unity. Assume that the bar is initially at temperature zero, u(x,0)=0, but there is a heat flux out of the bar at the left end, ux(0,t)=t and the same heat flux into the bar at the right end, $u_x(\pi,t)=t$. Find the temperature u(x,t) for arbitrary time. From the result, determine how the temperature profile in the bar looks for large times. Solution

3.
For the bar of the previous question, let us try to figure out how the temperature u(x,t) looks near the left end of the bar for very small times. To do so, we can ignore the effect of the right end. In other words, we will now take the bar to be semi-infinite. Solve this problem. From the solution, determine roughly how far the bar near the left end will be cooled for small times t. Solution

4.
The membrane of a circular drum is hit with a drum stick at a point halfway between the center of the drum and the rim. After scaling, the vibrations of the drum are governed by

\begin{displaymath}
u_{tt} = \nabla^2 u \quad u(1,\theta,t)=1,\end{displaymath}

\begin{displaymath}
u(r,\theta,0) = 0 \quad
 u_t(r,\theta,0) = \delta(r-{\textstyle\frac12},\theta),\end{displaymath}

where

\begin{displaymath}
\int\int f(r,\theta) \delta(r-{\textstyle\frac12},\theta) dr d\theta
 = f({\textstyle\frac12},0)\end{displaymath}

for any function f. Solution


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