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Explanation of the onset of bouncing cycles in isotropic rotor dynamics; a grazing bifurcation analysis
Author(s) -
Karin Mora,
Alan R. Champneys,
Alexander D. Shaw,
Michael I. Friswell
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2019.0549
Subject(s) - bifurcation , rotor (electric) , physics , mathematical analysis , mechanics , classical mechanics , mathematics , nonlinear system , quantum mechanics
The dynamics associated with bouncing-type partial contact cycles are considered for a 2 degree-of-freedom unbalanced rotor in the rigid-stator limit. Specifically, analytical explanation is provided for a previously proposed criterion for the onset upon increasing the rotor speed of single-bounce-per-period periodic motion, namely internal resonance between forward and backward whirling modes. Focusing on the cases of 2 : 1 and 3 : 2 resonances, detailed numerical results for small rotor damping reveal that stable bouncing periodic orbits, which coexist with non-contacting motion, arise just beyond the resonance speed . The theory of discontinuity maps is used to analyse the problem as a codimension-two degenerate grazing bifurcation in the limit of zero rotor damping and  =  . An analytic unfolding of the map explains all the features of the bouncing orbits locally. In particular, for non-zero damping , stable bouncing motion bifurcates in the direction of increasing speed in a smooth fold bifurcation point that is at rotor speed beyond . The results provide the first analytic explanation of partial-contact bouncing orbits and has implications for prediction and avoidance of unwanted machine vibrations in a number of different industrial settings.

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