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Rubber Rolling over a Sphere
J. Koillera,
K. Ehlersb a Fundação Getulio Vargas,
Praia de Botafogo 190, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 22250-040, Brazil
b Truckee Meadows Community College,
7000 Dandini Boulevard, Reno, NV 89512-3999, USA
Abstract:
"Rubber" coated bodies rolling over a surface satisfy a no-twist condition in addition to the no slip condition satisfied by "marble" coated bodies [1]. Rubber rolling has an interesting differential geometric appeal because the geodesic curvatures of the curves on the surfaces at corresponding points are equal. The associated distribution in the 5 dimensional configuration space has 2-3-5 growth (these distributions were first studied by Cartan; he showed that the maximal symmetries occurs for rubber rolling of spheres with 3:1 diameters ratio and materialize the exceptional group
$G_2$). The 2-3-5 nonholonomic geometries are classified in a companion paper [2] via Cartan's equivalence method [3]. Rubber rolling of a convex body
over a sphere defines a generalized Chaplygin system [4-8] with
$SO(3)$ symmetry group, total space
$Q = SO (3) \times S^2$ and base
$S^2$, that can be reduced to an almost Hamiltonian system in
$T * S^2$ with a non-closed 2-form
$\omega_{NH}$. In this paper we present some basic results on the sphere-sphere problem: a dynamically asymmetric but balanced sphere of radius
$b$ (unequal moments of inertia
$I_j$ but with center of gravity at the geometric center), rubber rolling over another sphere of radius
$a$. In this example
$\omega_{NH}$ is conformally symplectic [9]: the reduced system becomes Hamiltonian after a coordinate dependent change of time. In particular there is an invariant measure, whose density is the determinant of the reduced Legendre transform, to the power
$p = 1/2 (b/a - 1)$. Using sphero-conical coordinates we verify the result by Borisov and Mamaev [10] that the system is integrable for
$p=-1/2$ (ball over a plane). They have found another integrable case [11] corresponding to
$p=-3/2$ (rolling ball with twice the radius of a fixed internal ball). Strikingly, a different set of sphero-conical coordinates separates the Hamiltonian in this case. No other integrable cases with different
$I_j$ are known.
Keywords:
nonholonomic mechanics, reduction, Chaplygin systems.
MSC: 37J60,
70F25,
58A15,
58A30 Received: 02.12.2006
Accepted: 18.02.2007
Language: English
DOI:
10.1134/S1560354707020025