Affiliation:
1. Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, University of New Orleans
2. Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics, The University of Michigan
3. Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, The University of Michigan
Abstract
Ship capsizing is a highly nonlinear dynamic phenomenon where global system behavior is dominant. However the industry standards for analysis are limited to linear dynamics or nonlinear statics. Until recently, most nonlinear dynamic analysis relied upon perturbation methods which are severely restricted both with respect to the relative size of the nonlinearity and the region of consideration in the phase space (i.e., they are usually restricted to a small local region about a single equilibrium), or on numerical studies of idealized system models. In this work, recently developed global analysis techniques (e.g., those found in Guckenheimer and Holmes [1986], and Wiggins [1988, 1990]) are used to study transient rolling motions of a small ship which is subjected to a periodic wave excitation. This analysis is based on determining criteria which can predict the qualitative nature of the invariant manifolds which represent the boundary between safe and unsafe initial conditions, and how these depend on system parameters for a specific ship model. Of particular interest is the transition which this boundary makes from regular to fractal, implying a loss in predictability of the ship’s eventual state. In this paper, actual ship data is used in the development of the model and the effects of various ship and wave parameters on this transition are investigated. Finally, lobe dynamics are used to demonstrate how unpredictable capsizing can occur.
Publisher
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Modelling and Simulation,Engineering (miscellaneous)
Cited by
91 articles.
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