Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
11026501 Applied Mathematical Modelling 2019 27 Pages PDF
Abstract
The general solution to static and/or dynamic linear elasticity is a transformation between the displacements and new arbitrary functions, whose conservativeness depends on some independent partial differential equations (PDEs) satisfied by the new arbitrary functions. Zhang's general solutions are mathematically appropriate since the displacements are expressed in terms of two new arbitrary functions, and the sum of the highest order derivative added together from the independent PDEs satisfied by the two new arbitrary functions is the same as that of Navier-Cauchy equations. Therefore, the following points should be emphasized: (i) the independent PDEs come from the Laplace and D'Alembert operators acting on the two new arbitrary functions in static and dynamic general solutions, respectively, and it is found that the two new arbitrary functions are related to the rotations, first strain invariant and distortion; (ii) especially, conservation laws constructed from the equations satisfied by the spatial integrals of functions hold true, although some arbitrary functions of the spatial integrals have been canceled. Based on these facts, since Noether's identity not only can be applied to a Lagrangian but also can be used to construct a functional for widespread PDEs, the functionals relating to the rotations, first strain invariant and distortion are constructed with arbitrary integer order spatial derivative or integral, and the conservation laws follow. This kind of non-classical conservation laws does not come from the Lagrangian density of an elastic body and belongs to the deep-level natures of symmetries of elastic field derived by standard techniques. Availability is shown by two examples, from which the field intensity of a vertical load applied to the surface of an elastic half-space and the path-independent integrals in a coordinate system moving with Galilean transformation are presented for comparison.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Computational Mechanics
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