Chasles' theorem (kinematics)

In kinematics, Chasles' theorem, or Mozzi–Chasles' theorem, says that the most general rigid body displacement can be produced by a translation along a line (called its screw axis or Mozzi axis) followed (or preceded) by a rotation about an axis parallel to that line.[1][2][3] Such a composition of translation and rotation is called a screw displacement.

A screw axis. Mozzi–Chasles' theorem says that every Euclidean motion is a screw displacement along some screw axis.

History

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The proof that a spatial displacement can be decomposed into a rotation and slide around and along a line is attributed to the astronomer and mathematician Giulio Mozzi (1763), in fact the screw axis is traditionally called asse di Mozzi in Italy. However, most textbooks refer to a subsequent similar work by Michel Chasles dating from 1830.[4] Several other contemporaries of M. Chasles obtained the same or similar results around that time, including G. Giorgini, Cauchy, Poinsot, Poisson and Rodrigues. An account of the 1763 proof by Giulio Mozzi and some of its history can be found here.[5][6]

Proof

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Mozzi considers a rigid body undergoing first a rotation about an axis passing through the center of mass and then a translation of displacement D in an arbitrary direction. Any rigid motion can be accomplished in this way due to a theorem by Euler on the existence of an axis of rotation. The displacement D of the center of mass can be decomposed into components parallel and perpendicular to the axis. The perpendicular (and parallel) component acts on all points of the rigid body but Mozzi shows that for some points the previous rotation acted exactly with an opposite displacement, so those points are translated parallel to the axis of rotation. These points lie on the Mozzi axis through which the rigid motion can be accomplished through a screw motion.

Another elementary proof of Mozzi–Chasles' theorem was given by E. T. Whittaker in 1904.[7] Suppose A is to be transformed into B. Whittaker suggests that line AK be selected parallel to the axis of the given rotation, with K the foot of a perpendicular from B. The appropriate screw displacement is about an axis parallel to AK such that K is moved to B. The method corresponds to Euclidean plane isometry where a composition of rotation and translation can be replaced by rotation about an appropriate center. In Whittaker's terms, "A rotation about any axis is equivalent to a rotation through the same angle about any axis parallel to it, together with a simple translation in a direction perpendicular to the axis."

Calculation

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The calculation of the commuting translation and rotation from a screw motion can be performed using 3DPGA ( ), the geometric algebra of 3D Euclidean space.[8] It has three Euclidean basis vectors   satisfying   representing orthogonal planes through the origin, and one Grassmanian basis vector   satisfying   to represent the plane at infinity. Any plane a distance   from the origin can then be formed as a linear combination  which is normalized such that  . Because reflections can be represented by the plane in which the reflection occurs, the product of two planes   and   is the bireflection  . The result is a rotation around their intersection line  , which could also lie on the plane at infinity when the two reflections are parallel, in which case the bireflection   is a translation.

A screw motion   is the product of four non-collinear reflections, and thus  . But according to the Mozzi-Chasles' theorem a screw motion can be decomposed into a commuting translation  where   is the axis of translation satisfying  , and rotation where   is the axis of rotation satisfying  . The two bivector lines   and   are orthogonal and commuting. To find   and   from  , we simply write out   and consider the result grade-by-grade: Because the quadrivector part   and  ,   is directly found to be[9] and thus Thus, for a given screw motion   the commuting translation and rotation can be found using the two formulae above, after which the lines   and   are found to be proportional to   and   respectively.

Other dimensions and fields

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The Chasles' theorem is a special case of the Invariant decomposition.

References

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  1. ^ Kumar, V. "MEAM 520 notes: The theorems of Euler and Chasles" (PDF). University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  2. ^ Heard, William B. (2006). Rigid Body Mechanics. Wiley. p. 42. ISBN 3-527-40620-4.
  3. ^ Joseph, Toby (2020). "An Alternative Proof of Euler's Rotation Theorem". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 42 (4): 44–49. arXiv:2008.05378. doi:10.1007/s00283-020-09991-z. ISSN 0343-6993. S2CID 221103695.
  4. ^ Chasles, M. (1830). "Note sur les propriétés générales du système de deux corps semblables entr'eux". Bulletin des Sciences Mathématiques, Astronomiques, Physiques et Chemiques (in French). 14: 321–326.
  5. ^ Mozzi, Giulio (1763). Discorso matematico sopra il rotamento momentaneo dei corpi (in Italian). Napoli: Stamperia di Donato Campo.
  6. ^ Ceccarelli, Marco (2000). "Screw axis defined by Giulio Mozzi in 1763 and early studies on helicoidal motion". Mechanism and Machine Theory. 35 (6): 761–770. doi:10.1016/S0094-114X(99)00046-4.
  7. ^ E. T. Whittaker (1904) E. T. Whittaker. A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies. p. 4.
  8. ^ Gunn, Charles (2011-12-19). Geometry, Kinematics, and Rigid Body Mechanics in Cayley-Klein Geometries (Master's thesis). Technische Universität Berlin, Technische Universität Berlin, Ulrich Pinkall. doi:10.14279/DEPOSITONCE-3058.
  9. ^ Roelfs, Martin; De Keninck, Steven. "Graded Symmetry Groups: Plane and Simple".

Further reading

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