Abstract

The new method described in this paper employs an incomplete set of free-boundary normal modes of vibration, augmented with a low-frequency account for the contribution of neglected (residual) modes. The improve the accuracy of forced dynamic response in a manner which is related to the benefit of the mode-acceleration method. The new method adds residual inertial and dissipative effects to the residual flexibility introduced by MacNeal. All effects are derived from the solution of a special statics problem, followed by removal of the contributions of the retained modes. A structural component can then be represented in a stiffness-matrix form for various applications, one of which is modal synthesis. Numerical results of modal analysis for a cantilevered rod show the new method to yield superior accuracy to several other methods (including those of Hurty, Bamford, and MacNeal). All parameters for the new representation can be derived from test; this is not true for most other methods. Required are the free-boundary normal modes and the dynamic flexibility matrix vs frequency for the boundary points. Consequently, any desired mix of analytically derived and experimentally derived parameters can be employed.

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