Weighted catenary

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Template:Short description

The Gateway Arch is a weighted catenary: thick at the bottom, thin at the top.

A weighted catenary (also flattened catenary, was defined by William Rankine as transformed catenary[1] and thus sometimes called Rankine curve[2]) is a catenary curve, but of a special form: if a catenary is the curve formed by a chain under its own weight, a weighted catenary is the curve formed if the chain's weight is not consistent along its length. Formally, a "regular" catenary has the equation

y=acosh(xa)=a(exa+exa)2

for a given value of a. A weighted catenary has the equation

y=bcosh(xa)=b(exa+exa)2

and now two constants enter: a and b.

Significance

A hanging chain is a regular catenary — and is not weighted.

A catenary arch has a uniform thickness. However, if

  1. the arch is not of uniform thickness,[3]
  2. the arch supports more than its own weight,[4]
  3. or if gravity varies,[5]

it becomes more complex. A weighted catenary is needed.

The aspect ratio of a weighted catenary (or other curve) describes a rectangular frame containing the selected fragment of the curve theoretically continuing to the infinity. [6][7]

Examples

The Gateway Arch in the American city of St. Louis (Missouri) is the most famous example of a weighted catenary.Template:Citation needed

Simple suspension bridges use weighted catenaries.[7]

References

  1. Template:Cite journal
  2. Template:Cite web
  3. Template:Cite web
  4. Re-review: Catenary and Parabola: Re-review: Catenary and Parabola, accessdate: April 13, 2017
  5. MathOverflow: classical mechanics - Catenary curve under non-uniform gravitational field - MathOverflow, accessdate: April 13, 2017
  6. Definition from WhatIs.com: What is aspect ratio? - Definition from WhatIs.com, accessdate: April 13, 2017
  7. 7.0 7.1 Template:Cite web

On the Gateway arch

Commons