On the commutation of variation and differentiation in nonholonomic Systems: A Chetaev-based approach
Federico Talamucci

TL;DR
This paper examines the conditions under which the variational operator commutes with time derivatives in nonholonomic systems, revealing geometric constraints and introducing the concept of dynamic compensation for multiple constraints.
Contribution
It provides a Chetaev-based analysis of the commutation relation in nonholonomic systems, extending the understanding of dynamic consistency beyond classical integrability conditions.
Findings
Commutation fails unless specific geometric conditions are met.
Dynamic compensation can maintain consistency in non-integrable systems.
High-constraint systems exhibit robustness in dynamic consistency.
Abstract
The derivation of the equations of motion for nonholonomic systems remains a central issue in analytical mechanics, primarily due to the tension between the d'Alembert-Lagrange differential principle and integral variational approaches. This study investigates the validity of the commutation relation between the variational operator and the time derivative, which is a geometric identity in holonomic manifolds but becomes problematic when dealing with velocity-dependent constraints. By analyzing the transposition rule, we define a formal relationship between the Chetaev variation and the total variation of the constraints. We show that the simultaneous requirement of kinematically admissible variations and the fulfillment of the Chetaev condition is generally incompatible with the standard commutation rule, unless a specific geometric condition - encoded through a skew-symmetric…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsControl and Dynamics of Mobile Robots · Control and Stability of Dynamical Systems · Homotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology
