Energy conserving schemes for the simulation of musical instrument contact dynamics
Vasileios Chatziioannou, Maarten van Walstijn

TL;DR
This paper introduces energy conserving numerical schemes for simulating contact dynamics in musical instruments, ensuring stability and physical accuracy in impact modeling for both point masses and distributed systems.
Contribution
It presents a systematic Hamiltonian-based approach to derive implicit, energy conserving schemes for impact simulation in musical instrument modeling.
Findings
The schemes are stable and energy conserving.
Validated with simulations of string and beam impacts.
Confirmed relevance through a tanpura string case study.
Abstract
Collisions are an innate part of the function of many musical instruments. Due to the nonlinear nature of contact forces, special care has to be taken in the construction of numerical schemes for simulation and sound synthesis. Finite difference schemes and other time-stepping algorithms used for musical instrument modelling purposes are normally arrived at by discretising a Newtonian description of the system. However because impact forces are non-analytic functions of the phase space variables, algorithm stability can rarely be established this way. This paper presents a systematic approach to deriving energy conserving schemes for frictionless impact modelling. The proposed numerical formulations follow from discretising Hamilton's equations of motion, generally leading to an implicit system of nonlinear equations that can be solved with Newton's method. The approach is first…
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