Published September 19, 2023 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

On a class of bimodal oscillations powered by a steady, zero-frequency force—Implications to energy conversion and structural stability

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

I propose that there exists in natural and artificial environments a class of resonant oscillations that can be excited directly by a steady, zero-frequency force such as that of wind, water, electric field. A member of this class comprises two normally independent oscillating modes of a system, for example, a building or bridge, which, separately, cannot be driven by a zero-frequency force. Agreeing on terms of collaboration, the two modes engage in a joint oscillation powered by the steady zero-frequency force in which they drive each other, one directly and the other parametrically. I observed a bimodal vibration belonging to this class in a home shower where the two modes are the pendulum excursion and the torsional twisting of a freely suspended showerhead which break into a joint oscillation above a threshold value of the water flow rate. I advance a theoretical model which predicts and explains the main features of the observations. The model constitutes an extension to two modes of a proposal and demonstration in 1883 by Lord Rayleigh and Michael Faraday for the excitation of a single resonant mode by modulating a system parameter at twice the resonance frequency. The proposal is credited with the launching of parametric physics. The Experiments section of this report consists of three linked video clips photographed in the home shower which support the basic theoretical assumptions. The ubiquity of zero-frequency forces, such as that of wind, and their direct conversion to alternating on-resonance system vibrations endows the class with an amplified destructive potential with implications for structural stability.

Copyright and License

© 2023 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY).

Acknowledgement

Acknowledgments for invaluable help and support throughout are due to Drs. Christos Santis, Stephany Turner, and David Zierler and to my cameraman, Christoph Deluy, who ventured into the shower armed with little more than an iPhone. Thanks are also due to the Division of Engineering and Applied Science, California Institute of Technology for support of this investigation.

Contributions

A.Z.Y. designed research; performed research; and wrote the paper.

Data Availability

All study data are included in the article and/or supporting information.

Conflict of Interest

The author declares no competing interest.

Attached Files

Published article: pnas.2311412120.pdf.
Supporting information: pnas.2311412120.sapp.pdf.

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Funding

California Institute of Technology