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Fernando Nadal Martínez
Posted: Thu May 17, 2007 5:23 am
Guest
Hi all,

Can I use the Gauss-Green Theorem to calculate the moment of inertia of
a 2D closed bezier curve ? Let me explain myself:

Let g(t) be a piecewise differentiable curve, with 0 <= t <= 1. g(t) is
oriented clockwise and g(1) = g(0).

Let
F(x,y) = [-x²y , xy²]

Then:
div(F(x, y)) = x²+y²

Now the divergence theorem gives you the area inside the closed curve
g(t) as a line integral along the curve:

I = int( dot( F(g(t)) , perp(g'(t) ) ) dt =
= int( -gx(t)²gy(t)d(gy(t))/dt + gx(t)gy(t)²d(gx(t))dt ) dt

perp(x, y) = (-y, x)

where int is for integration, d/dt for differentiation and dot for dot
product. The integration has to be pieced to the parts corresponding to
the smooth curve segments.

Did I do any mistake ( I calculated the integral expression with Maple )
? The numerical results are wrong..

I used the same approach to evaluate the area of the curve ( F(x,y) =
[x,-y]/2 and calculated with Maple too )and works great..

Thanks all..
Robert Israel
Posted: Fri May 18, 2007 12:02 am
Guest
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Fernando_Nadal_Mart=EDnez?= <fnm@uma.es> writes:

Quote:
Hi all,

Can I use the Gauss-Green Theorem to calculate the moment of inertia of
a 2D closed bezier curve ? Let me explain myself:

Let g(t) be a piecewise differentiable curve, with 0 <= t <= 1. g(t) is
oriented clockwise and g(1) = g(0).

Let
F(x,y) = [-x²y , xy²]

Then:
div(F(x, y)) = x²+y²

No, div F = 0. Perhaps you want [x y^2, x^2 y].

Quote:
Now the divergence theorem gives you the area inside the closed curve
g(t) as a line integral along the curve:

I = int( dot( F(g(t)) , perp(g'(t) ) ) dt =
= int( -gx(t)²gy(t)d(gy(t))/dt + gx(t)gy(t)²d(gx(t))dt ) dt

perp(x, y) = (-y, x)

where int is for integration, d/dt for differentiation and dot for dot
product. The integration has to be pieced to the parts corresponding to
the smooth curve segments.

Did I do any mistake ( I calculated the integral expression with Maple )
? The numerical results are wrong..

I used the same approach to evaluate the area of the curve ( F(x,y) =
[x,-y]/2 and calculated with Maple too )and works great..

Divergence of that one is 0.
--
Robert Israel israel@math.MyUniversitysInitials.ca
Department of Mathematics http://www.math.ubc.ca/~israel
University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada
Fernando Nadal Martínez
Posted: Mon May 21, 2007 5:22 am
Guest
What a silly mistake.. Thanks Robert

Robert Israel escribió:
Quote:
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Fernando_Nadal_Mart=EDnez?= <fnm@uma.es> writes:

Hi all,

Can I use the Gauss-Green Theorem to calculate the moment of inertia of
a 2D closed bezier curve ? Let me explain myself:

Let g(t) be a piecewise differentiable curve, with 0 <= t <= 1. g(t) is
oriented clockwise and g(1) = g(0).

Let
F(x,y) = [-x²y , xy²]

Then:
div(F(x, y)) = x²+y²

No, div F = 0. Perhaps you want [x y^2, x^2 y].

Now the divergence theorem gives you the area inside the closed curve
g(t) as a line integral along the curve:

I = int( dot( F(g(t)) , perp(g'(t) ) ) dt =
= int( -gx(t)²gy(t)d(gy(t))/dt + gx(t)gy(t)²d(gx(t))dt ) dt

perp(x, y) = (-y, x)

where int is for integration, d/dt for differentiation and dot for dot
product. The integration has to be pieced to the parts corresponding to
the smooth curve segments.

Did I do any mistake ( I calculated the integral expression with Maple )
? The numerical results are wrong..

I used the same approach to evaluate the area of the curve ( F(x,y) =
[x,-y]/2 and calculated with Maple too )and works great..

Divergence of that one is 0.
 
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