Spatial acceleration
{{lead rewrite|date=January 2017}}
In physics, the study of rigid body motion allows for several ways to define the acceleration of a body.{{cn|date=May 2022}} The usual definition of acceleration entails following a single particle/point of a rigid body and observing its changes in velocity. Spatial acceleration entails looking at a fixed (unmoving) point in space and observing the change in velocity of the particles that pass through that point. This is similar to the definition of acceleration in fluid dynamics, where typically one measures velocity and/or acceleration at a fixed point inside a testing apparatus.
Definition
Consider a moving rigid body and the velocity of a point P on the body being a function of the position and velocity of a center-point C and the angular velocity .
The linear velocity vector at P is expressed in terms of the velocity vector at C as:
where is the angular velocity vector.
The material acceleration at P is:
\mathbf a_P = \frac{d \mathbf v_P}{dt}
= \mathbf a_C + \boldsymbol \alpha \times (\mathbf r_P - \mathbf r_C) + \boldsymbol \omega \times (\mathbf v_P - \mathbf v_C)
where is the angular acceleration vector.
The spatial acceleration at P is expressed in terms of the spatial acceleration at C as:
\boldsymbol \psi_P &= \frac{\partial \mathbf v_P}{\partial t} \\[1ex]
&= \boldsymbol \psi_{C} + \boldsymbol \alpha \times (\mathbf{r}_{P} - \mathbf{r}_{C})
\end{align}
which is similar to the velocity transformation above.
In general the spatial acceleration of a particle point P that is moving with linear velocity is derived from the material acceleration at P as:
References
- {{cite book|title=Fluid Mechanics|author=Frank M. White|publisher=McGraw-Hill Professional|year=2003|isbn=0-07-240217-2}}
- {{cite book|title=Robot Dynamics Algorithms|author=Roy Featherstone|publisher=Springer|year=1987|isbn=0-89838-230-0}} This reference effectively combines screw theory with rigid body dynamics for robotic applications. The author also chooses to use spatial accelerations extensively in place of material accelerations as they simplify the equations and allows for compact notation. See [https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~todorov/courses/amath533/FeatherstoneSlides.pdf#page=23 online presentation, page 23] also from same author.
- JPL DARTS page has a section on spatial operator algebra (link: [https://web.archive.org/web/20040609053940/http://dshell.jpl.nasa.gov/SOA/index.php]) as well as an extensive list of references (link: [https://web.archive.org/web/20040609052639/http://dshell.jpl.nasa.gov/References/index.php]).
- {{cite book|title=Springer Handbook of Robotics|author1=Bruno Siciliano | author2 = Oussama Khatib | author2-link = Oussama Khatib | publisher=Springer|year=2008 | page = 41 |isbn=9783540239574 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Xpgi5gSuBxsC&pg=PA40}} This reference defines spatial accelerations for use in rigid body mechanics.