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13.3: Holonomic Constraints

  • Page ID
    7011
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    The complete description of a system of \( N\) unconstrained particles requires \( 3N\) coordinates. You can think of the state of the system at any time as being represented by a single point in \( 3N\)-dimensional space. If the system consists of molecules in a gas, or a cluster of stars, or a swarm of bees, the coordinates will be continually changing, and the point that describes the system will be moving, perhaps completely unconstrained, in its \( 3N\)-dimensional space.

    However, in many systems, the particles may not be free to wander anywhere at will; they may be subject to various constraints. A constraint that can be described by an equation relating the coordinates (and perhaps also the time) is called a holonomic constraint, and the equation that describes the constraint is a holonomic equation. If a system of \( N\) particles is subject to \( k\) holonomic constraints, the point in \( 3N\)-dimensional space that describes the system at any time is not free to move anywhere in \( 3N\)-dimensional space, but it is constrained to move over a surface of dimension \( 3N-k\). In effect only \( 3N-k\) coordinates are needed to describe the system, given that the coordinates are connected by \( k\) holonomic equations.

    Incidentally, I looked up the word “holonomic” in The Oxford English Dictionary and it said that the word was from the Greek ő\( \lambda\omicron\varsigma\), meaning “whole” or “entire” and \( \nu\grave{\omicron}\mu-\omicron\varsigma\), meaning “law”. It also said “applied to a constrained system in which the equations defining the constraints are integrable or already free of differentials, so that each equation effectively reduces the number of coordinates by one; also applied to the constraints themselves.”

    As an example, consider a bar of wet soap slithering around in a hemispherical basin of radius \( a\). You can describe its position in the basin by means of the usual two spherical angles \( (\theta, \phi)\); the motion is otherwise constrained by its remaining in contact with the basin; that is to say it is subject to the holonomic constraint \( r=a\). Thus instead of needing three coordinates to describe the position of a totally unconstrained particle, we need only two coordinates.

    Or again, consider the double pendulum shown in Figure XIII.1, and suppose that the pendulum is constrained to swing only in the plane of the paper – or of the screen of your computer monitor.

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    Two unconstrained particles would require six coordinates to specify their positions but this system is subject to four holonomic constraints. The holonomic equations \( z_{1}=0\) and \( z_{2}=0\) constrain the particles to be moving in a plane, and, if the strings are kept taut, we have the additional holonomic constraints \( x_{1}^{2}+y_{1}^{2}=l_{1}^{2}\) and \( (x_{2}-x_{1})^{2}+(y_{2}-y_{1})^{2}=l_{2}^{2}\). Thus only two coordinates are needed to describe the system, and they could conveniently be the angles that the two strings make with the vertical.


    This page titled 13.3: Holonomic Constraints is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jeremy Tatum via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.