In this paper, we have considered an inhomogeneous beam with a damping distributed along the length of the beam. The beam is clamped at both ends and is assumed to vibrate longitudinally. We have estimated the total energy of the system at any time t. By constructing suitable Lyapunov functional, it is established directly that the energy of this system decays exponentially.
In the last few decades the use of flexible structures is on rise. Research in the area of stabilization of vibrations of flexible structures like strings, beams, plates has been gaining importance since early seventies. The study of the stabilization for these problems is significant in the sense to suppress the vibrations to assure a good performance of the overall system.
The vibrations of flexible structures are usually nonlinear in practice. As the non-linear study of such structures is rather cumbersome for analytical treatment, so linearized mathematical models are chosen for simplicity and concise results. The linearized vibrations of flexible structures are usually governed by partial differential equations, particularly, the second order wave equation and the fourth-order Euler-Bernoulli beam equation. Several authors have established stabilization for the wave equation in a bounded domain (cf. G. Chen [1,2], J. Lagnese [3,4], J. L. Lions [
The energy decay estimate in developing the theory of stabilization over distributed parameter system in view of its application in various flexible structures has been established by several authors (cf. G. Chen [1,2], J. Lagnese [3,4], J. L. Lions [
We consider a flexible inhomogeneous beam of length which is clamped at both ends. It is initially set to vibrate in the longitudinal direction along axis. At time, if is the longitudinal displacement of the beam at a position, then it satisfies the differential equation (cf. K. Liu and Z. Liu [
where the coefficients, and are functions of for a general inhomogeneous beam with
For a clamped beam, the boundary conditions are
Let the beam be set to vibrate with initial values
The total energy E(t) of the System (1)-(3) at time t is defined by
Differentiating (4) with respect to t and using (1), we obtain
where the integration is performed by parts and the boundary conditions in (2) are used. Integrating (5) over [0, t], we get
where
In view of (5), the rate of change of energy with time is negative, so the energy of the system is dissipating with time. Our aim in this work is to establish the uniform exponential decay of this energy.
Now the estimate (6) implies that, if and, where
is the subspace of the classical Sobolev space
of real valued functions of order one, then for every Hence the System (1)-(3) has a unique solution for
The main result of this paper can be stated in the following theorem.
Theorem 1. Let be a solution of the system (1)-(3) with the initial values Then the total energy of the system decays uniformly exponentially with time, that means, the energy satisfies the relation
for some finite reals and, both being independent of time.
The theorem will be proved using the following results. For any real number we have by the CauchySchwartz’s inequality
By Poincare type Scheeffer’s inequality [
By mean value theorem of integral calculus, there are reals, , , , satisfying
Next we consider the following lemmas:
Lemma 1. For every solution of the system (1)-(3), the time derivative of the functional (cf. G. C. Gorain [
satisfies
Proof: Differentiating (18) with respect to and using the equation (1), we obtain
Integrating by parts and using the boundary Conditions (2) and the energy Identity (4), we get
Hence the lemma.
Lemma 2. For every solution of the System (1)-(3), an estimate of the functional is given by
where
Proof: We can estimate the 1st term (18) as,
where
Again, we can estimate the 2nd term (18) as,
Adding (24) and (26), the lemma follows immediately.
Proof of Theorem 1: Proceeding as in G. C. Gorain [
where is a small constant.
In view of Lemma 2, the functional defined by (27) can be estimated as
Since, we may assume that
so that
Differentiating (27) with respect to, and using (5) and (19), we obtain
Hence, using the above relation (13) and (16), we can write (30) as
Since is small, we may choose further
so that the differential relation (31) reduces to
Invoking the Inequality (28), the relation (33) leads to the differential inequality
where
Multiplying (34) by and integrating from 0 to, we obtain
Applying again the inequality (28) in (36), we get
where
Hence the theorem.
We have established here the uniform stabilization of the vibrations of an inhomogeneous beam which is clamped at both ends. The result is achieved directly by means of an exponential energy decay estimate. It is significant in the sense that the solution of the system given by (1)-(3) converges uniformly to zero as time tends to. The result shows that the vibrations of the inhomogeneous beam decay rapidly for large value of. Again
shows that exponential decay rate being a function of will be maximum for largest admissible value of.