Vibrations of a circular membrane

A two-dimensional elastic membrane under tension can support transverse vibrations. The properties of an idealized drumhead can be modeled by the vibrations of a circular membrane of uniform thickness, attached to a rigid frame. Due to the phenomenon of resonance, at certain vibration frequencies, its resonant frequencies, the membrane can store vibrational energy, the surface moving in a characteristic pattern of standing waves. This is called a normal mode. A membrane has an infinite number of these normal modes, starting with a lowest frequency one called the fundamental mode.

One of the possible modes of vibration of an idealized circular drum head (mode with the notation below). Other possible modes are shown at the bottom of the article.

There exist infinitely many ways in which a membrane can vibrate, each depending on the shape of the membrane at some initial time, and the transverse velocity of each point on the membrane at that time. The vibrations of the membrane are given by the solutions of the two-dimensional wave equation with Dirichlet boundary conditions which represent the constraint of the frame. It can be shown that any arbitrarily complex vibration of the membrane can be decomposed into a possibly infinite series of the membrane's normal modes. This is analogous to the decomposition of a time signal into a Fourier series.

The study of vibrations on drums led mathematicians to pose a famous mathematical problem on whether the shape of a drum can be heard, with an answer being given in 1992 in the two-dimensional setting.

Motivation

Analyzing the vibrating drum head problem explains percussion instruments such as drums and timpani. However, there is also a biological application in the working of the eardrum. From an educational point of view the modes of a two-dimensional object are a convenient way to visually demonstrate the meaning of modes, nodes, antinodes and even quantum numbers. These concepts are important to the understanding of the structure of the atom.

The problem

Consider an open disk of radius centered at the origin, which will represent the "still" drum head shape. At any time the height of the drum head shape at a point in measured from the "still" drum head shape will be denoted by which can take both positive and negative values. Let denote the boundary of that is, the circle of radius centered at the origin, which represents the rigid frame to which the drum head is attached.

The mathematical equation that governs the vibration of the drum head is the wave equation with zero boundary conditions,

Due to the circular geometry of , it will be convenient to use cylindrical coordinates, Then, the above equations are written as

Here, is a positive constant, which gives the speed at which transverse vibration waves propagate in the membrane. In terms of the physical parameters, the wave speed, c, is given by

where , is the radial membrane resultant at the membrane boundary (), , is the membrane thickness, and is the membrane density. If the membrane has uniform tension, the uniform tension force at a given radius, may be written

where is the membrane resultant in the azimuthal direction.

The axisymmetric case

We will first study the possible modes of vibration of a circular drum head that are axisymmetric. Then, the function does not depend on the angle and the wave equation simplifies to

We will look for solutions in separated variables, Substituting this in the equation above and dividing both sides by yields

The left-hand side of this equality does not depend on and the right-hand side does not depend on it follows that both sides must be equal to some constant We get separate equations for and :

The equation for has solutions which exponentially grow or decay for are linear or constant for and are periodic for . Physically it is expected that a solution to the problem of a vibrating drum head will be oscillatory in time, and this leaves only the third case, so we choose for convenience. Then, is a linear combination of sine and cosine functions,

Turning to the equation for with the observation that all solutions of this second-order differential equation are a linear combination of Bessel functions of order 0, since this is a special case of Bessel's differential equation:

The Bessel function is unbounded for which results in an unphysical solution to the vibrating drum head problem, so the constant must be null. We will also assume as otherwise this constant can be absorbed later into the constants and coming from It follows that

The requirement that height be zero on the boundary of the drum head results in the condition

The Bessel function has an infinite number of positive roots,

We get that for so

Therefore, the axisymmetric solutions of the vibrating drum head problem that can be represented in separated variables are

where

The general case

The general case, when can also depend on the angle is treated similarly. We assume a solution in separated variables,

Substituting this into the wave equation and separating the variables, gives

where is a constant. As before, from the equation for it follows that with and

From the equation

we obtain, by multiplying both sides by and separating variables, that

and

for some constant Since is periodic, with period being an angular variable, it follows that

where and and are some constants. This also implies

Going back to the equation for its solution is a linear combination of Bessel functions and With a similar argument as in the previous section, we arrive at

where with the -th positive root of

We showed that all solutions in separated variables of the vibrating drum head problem are of the form

for

Animations of several vibration modes

A number of modes are shown below together with their quantum numbers. The analogous wave functions of the hydrogen atom are also indicated as well as the associated angular frequencies .

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See also

  • Vibrating string, the one-dimensional case
  • Chladni patterns, an early description of a related phenomenon, in particular with musical instruments; see also cymatics
  • Hearing the shape of a drum, characterising the modes with respect to the shape of the membrane
  • Atomic orbital, a related quantum-mechanical and three-dimensional problem

References

  • H. Asmar, Nakhle (2005). Partial differential equations with Fourier series and boundary value problems. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 198. ISBN 0-13-148096-0.
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