Abstract:
In connection with the problem of a convex-shaped solid body on a rough horizontal plane (the rattleback or Celtic stone), the paper discusses the validity of the nonholonomic model which postulates that the contact point has zero velocity and, hence, friction performs no mechanical work. While abstract, this model is undoubtedly constructive, similar to many idealizations commonly used in science. Despite its energy-conserving nature, the model does not obey Liouville's theorem on phase volume conservation, thus allowing the occurrence in the phase space of objects characteristic of dissipative dynamics (attractors) and thereby leading to phenomena like the spontaneous reversal of rotations. Nonholonomic models, intermediate between conservative and dissipative systems, should take their deserved place in the general picture of the modern theory of dynamical systems.
Citation:
S. P. Kuznetsov, “On the validity of the nonholonomic model of the rattleback”, UFN, 185:12 (2015), 1342–1344; Phys. Usp., 58:12 (2015), 1223–1224