The authors have presented [1] an interesting paper on the analysis of ground vibrations related to railway tra$c. Their work has extended previous presented analyses to take into account the e!ect of a layered supporting soil as well as the transient nature of ground vibrations related to railway t
Floating ladder track response to a steadily moving load
✍ Scribed by Roger J. Hosking; Fausto Milinazzo
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 316 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0170-4214
- DOI
- 10.1002/mma.871
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Floating ladder rail tracks, which can significantly reduce traffic vibration and noise, have already been installed at several railway sites in and around Tokyo. The steel rails are fixed onto successive ladder‐like sections with two parallel longitudinal reinforced concrete sleepers, which are then mounted upon discrete resilient supports on a concrete bed. A simple mathematical model in which a continuous horizontal Bernoulli–Euler beam on periodic discrete elastic supports represents each floating ‘combined rail’ (i.e. rail and longitudinal sleeper), used earlier to discuss the low‐frequency free vibrations in the system, is again adopted to investigate the response due to a steadily moving load. We demonstrate that Fourier transforms can be invoked to obtain the forced deflexion, which depends upon the load speed. A contribution from the periodic supports
determines the steady component of the deflexion moving with the load, and the other contributions from the supports produce oscillations. As is the case for a load moving over a beam or plate with continuous support, the response may be characterized using the free flexural wave dispersion relation—although there is now a countably infinite number of dispersion curves, corresponding to the existence of propagation bands in the periodic structure. The lowest wavenumber local minimum in the phase speed (coincident with the group speed) defines the primary critical load speed of most interest, at which the magnitude of the steady component accompanying the moving load becomes large. This primary critical load speed depends upon the relative elasticity of the discrete supports, which must not be too low if the floating ladder track is to be safe for fast rail systems. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The problem of transverse vibrations of homogeneous isotropic rotating beams due to the passage of dierent types of loads is of considerable practical interest. Using analytical and numerical methods, this paper investigates the stochastic dynamic response of a rotating simply supported beam subject
The transverse vibration of a beam with intermediate point constraints subject to a moving load is analyzed by using the Euler beam theory and the assumed mode method. The point constraints in the form of supports are assumed to be linear springs of large stiffness. Results of numerical simulations
The dynamic sti!ness matrix of an in"nite Timoshenko beam on viscoelastic foundation to a harmonic moving load is established. This dynamic sti!ness matrix is essentially a function of the velocity and frequency of the harmonic moving load. The critical velocities and the resonant frequencies can be
The dynamic response of a rotating shaft subject to an axially, constant-velocity, moving and rotating load is investigated. The dynamic behaviour of future, high-speed linear bearings is studied. Shafts used in linear bearing applications are typically slender. Therefore, Rayleigh beam theory is us