More detailed and accessible derivations of the equations in section 2 of the paper "Michelle Trusses and Lines of Principal Action" are provided here. See Stress and Measure Theory modules for background material.
Michelle trusses
Unidirectional curve stress
Let
be a simple curve in
. In other words
is the image of a map
such that
for each
and
is injective.
We will also require without loss of generality that
trace out the curve
at a constant speed, making
constant on
. Therefore
for each
and the unit tangent vector to
at time
will be
The curvature
at time
is then given by
We now define a measure
that is proportional to the stress along the curve
.
Thus
is a rank 1 symmetric matrix measure.
We will now treat
as the functional on
that corresponds to the measure
.
For any
,
To find the divergence of the measure
, we let an arbitrary vector-valued function
be given and we evaluate the functional
.
Using the definitions of the inner product and the tensor product, we can convert the matrix product
into a vector product:
Therefore
where
and
. Since this equation holds for any
, we say that the measure
is given by
When the curve
is just equal to the line segment
,
and
. Therefore our equation becomes
Stress in a truss
The stress in a beam is given by
for some
. A finite collection of such beams is a
truss . Therefore the stress in a truss that consists of
nodes at
is given by
where we require that
for each
.
Recall that the stress
of a structure that is in equilibrium must satisfy the restrictions
and
. It is easy to see that
will be symmetric by definition. Therefore, if our truss is in equilibrium, there must be a force distribution
such that
Since the operator
is linear, we get
which will be our new requirement for a truss to be balanced
[link] .
Cost of a truss
If we are given a force distribution
, a set of points
, and a set of weights
such that
, then the cost of the truss structure will be the "total mass" of the structure, which is given by
.
Cost minimization
Given a truss
, which consists of a set of points
and a set of weights
, and given a force distribution
of finite support, we define a set
of all admissible stress measures for the truss T.
The requirement
is equivalent to the restriction that
be rank 1 and supported on a finite collection of simple curves.
We also define the set
of all stress measures for structures that balance the force distribution
. The stresses in this set do not necessarily correspond to trusses, since we have dropped the requirement that the stress be rank 1 and concentrated on curves in
. In fact, the stress measures in
may be spread out over a region of
. Also, we may allow the given force
to be diffuse.
Our original optimization problem was to find a truss
such that the cost of
is equal to
for a given force distribution
of finite support. This is equivalent to finding a stress measure
such that
Such a
, however, does not always exist
[link] .