NAROSep 1, 2021

Solving the Discrete Euler-Arnold Equations for the Generalized Rigid Body Motion

arXiv:2109.00505v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a computational problem in physics and engineering for simulating rigid body motion, but it is incremental as it builds on existing optimization techniques.

The authors tackled solving the Moser-Veselov equation for generalized rigid body motion by proposing three iterative optimization methods, with numerical experiments showing the first algorithm performed best in accuracy and iteration count.

We propose three iterative methods for solving the Moser-Veselov equation, which arises in the discretization of the Euler-Arnold differential equations governing the motion of a generalized rigid body. We start by formulating the problem as an optimization problem with orthogonal constraints and proving that the objective function is convex. Then, using techniques from optimization on Riemannian manifolds, the three feasible algorithms are designed. The first one splits the orthogonal constraints using the Bregman method, whereas the other two methods are of the steepest-descent type. The second method uses the Cayley-transform to preserve the constraints and a Barzilai-Borwein step size, while the third one involves geodesics, with the step size computed by Armijo's rule. Finally, a set of numerical experiments are carried out to compare the performance of the proposed algorithms, suggesting that the first algorithm has the best performance in terms of accuracy and number of iterations. An essential advantage of these iterative methods is that they work even when the conditions for applicability of the direct methods available in the literature are not satisfied.

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