Rigid - Dynamics Krishna Series Pdf

Theorem 5 (Nonholonomic constraints) For nonholonomic constraints linear in velocities (distribution D ⊂ TQ), the Lagrange–d'Alembert principle yields constrained equations; these do not in general derive from a variational principle on reduced space. Well-posedness is proved under standard regularity and complementarity conditions (Section 6).

Theorem 2 (Euler–Lagrange on manifolds) Let Q be a smooth configuration manifold and L: TQ → R a C^2 Lagrangian. A C^2 curve q(t) is an extremal of the action integral S[q] = ∫ L(q, q̇) dt with fixed endpoints iff it satisfies the Euler–Lagrange equations in local coordinates; coordinate-free formulation uses the variational derivative dS = 0 leading to intrinsic equations. (Proof: Section 4, including existence/uniqueness under regularity assumptions.) rigid dynamics krishna series pdf

Theorem 4 (Reduction by symmetry — Euler–Poincaré) If L is invariant under a Lie group G action, then dynamics reduce to the Lie algebra via the Euler–Poincaré equations. For rigid body with G = SO(3), reduced equations are Euler's equations. (Proof: Section 7.) A C^2 curve q(t) is an extremal of

Theorem 6 (Structure-preserving integrators) Lie group variational integrators constructed via discrete variational principles on G (e.g., discrete Lagrangian on SE(3)) produce discrete flows that preserve group structure and a discrete momentum map; they exhibit good long-term energy behavior. Convergence and order results are stated and proven for schemes of practical interest (Section 9). (Proof: Section 7