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o
2
u
ox
2
; rod;
o
4
u
ox
4
; beam:
_
_
_
2
Based on the dual formulation, we can construct the
boundary integral equations
pux CPV
_
B
Ts; xus dBs
RPV
_
B
Us; x
ous
on
s
dBs; x 2 B 3
ptx HPV
_
B
Ms; xusdBs
CPV
_
B
Ls; x
ous
on
s
dBs; x 2 B 4
where tx oux=on
x
, Us; x is the fundamental so-
lution, Ts; x oUs; x=on
s
, Ls; x oUs; x=on
x
and
Ms; x o
2
Us; x=on
s
on
x
, U, T, L and M are the four
kernels as shown in Table 1 for U kernel, and RPV, CPV
and HPV denote the Riemann principal value, Cauchy
principal value and Hadamard or Mangler principal
value, respectively. After discretizing Eqs. (3) and (4), we
have
Uftg Tfug; 5
Lftg Mfug: 6
If U and L are invertible, the static stiness can be
obtained by
ftg K
UT
fug; 7
ftg K
LM
fug; 8
where K
UT
and K
LM
are the stiness matrices obtained
by the UT and LM equations, respectively, and
Table 1
The U kernels
Rod Beam Membrane
Us; x
1
2
r
1
12
r
3
lnr
1396 J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404
K
UT
U
1
T; 9
K
LM
L
1
M: 10
It is well known that the conventional BEM en-
counter the degenerate scale when the U matrix is
singular. In such case, the direct calculation for the
stiness matrix is not straightforward. In the following
two sections, we will discuss the singular case in a special
case of 2-D circular membrane.
3. Derivation of stiness matrix for a circular mem-
branespecial case
The governing equation for the two-dimensional
Laplace equation is:
r
2
ux
1
; x
2
0; x
1
; x
2
2 D; 11
where r
2
is the Laplacian operator, and D is the do-
main. Based on the dual formulation [2], the unied
null-eld integral formulation for the Laplace equation
using the direct method can be written as
0
_
B
Ts; xus dBs
_
B
Us; xts dBs; 12
0
_
B
Ms; xus dBs
_
B
Ls; xts dBs; 13
where ts ous=on
s
and B denotes the boundary
enclosing D. For the exterior problem, we have
Us; x U
i
s; x, Ts; x T
i
s; x, Ls; x L
i
s; x and
Ms; x M
i
s; x. In case of interior problem, we have
Us; x U
e
s; x, Ts; x T
e
s; x, Ls; x L
e
s; x
and Ms; x M
e
s; x. The selected kernels are designed
to have the null-eld equation without the jump terms.
The eight kernels of U
i
, U
e
, T
i
, T
e
, L
i
, L
e
, M
i
and M
e
can
be obtained by using the degenerate kernels which will
be elaborated on later. If the rigid body mode c, and
the linear terms (pRcosh and qRsinh), are superim-
posed in the fundamental solution, we have U
c
s; x
Us; x pRcosh qRsinh c, where p, q and c are
arbitrary constants. Based on the separable properties
for the kernels, the kernel functions in the dual BEM can
be expanded into degenerate forms as follows [3,21]:
U
c
s; x
U
i
c
R; h; q; / lnR pRcosh qRsinh c
1
m1
1
m
q
R
m
cosmh /; R > q;
U
e
c
R; h; q; / lnq pRcosh qRsinh c
1
m1
1
m
R
q
m
cosmh /; R < q;
_
_
14
T
c
s; x
T
i
c
R; h; q; /
1
R
p cosh q sinh
1
m1
q
m
R
m1
cosmh /; R > q;
T
e
c
R; h; q; / p cosh q sinh
1
m1
R
m1
q
m
cosmh /; R < q;
_
_
15
L
c
s; x
L
i
c
R; h; q; /
1
m1
q
m1
R
m
cosmh /; R > q;
L
e
c
R; h; q; /
1
q
1
m1
R
m
q
m1
cosmh /; R < q;
_
_
16
M
c
s; x
M
i
c
R; h; q; /
1
m1
mq
m1
R
m1
cosmh /; R > q;
M
e
c
R; h; q; /
1
m1
mR
m1
q
m1
cosmh /; R < q;
_
_
17
where i and e denotes the interior point (R > q) and
the exterior point (R < q), respectively, x q; / and
s R; h in the polar coordinate as shown in Fig. 1. For
a problem with a circular boundary, the boundary can
be discretized into 2N constant elements with equal
length. The linear algebraic dual equations can be
obtained as shown below:
U
c
2N2N
ftg
2N1
T
c
2N2N
fug
2N1
; 18
L
c
2N2N
ftg
2N1
M
c
2N2N
fug
2N1
; 19
where U
c
, T
c
, L
c
and M
c
are the four inuence
matrices, fug and ftg are the boundary data for the
primary and the secondary elds, respectively. Based on
the circular symmetry, the inuence matrices for the
discrete system are found to be circulants with the fol-
lowing forms [3,13,18,21],
Fig. 1. Symbols in the degenerate kernels for the two-dimen-
sional Laplace equation.
J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404 1397
U
c
u
0
u
1
u
2
u
2N1
u
2N1
u
0
u
1
u
2N2
u
2N2
u
2N1
u
0
u
2N3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
u
1
u
2
u
3
u
0
_
_
_
_
; 20
T
c
t
0
t
1
t
2
t
2N1
t
2N1
t
0
t
1
t
2N2
t
2N2
t
2N1
t
0
t
2N3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
t
1
t
2
t
3
t
0
_
_
_
_
; 21
L
c
l
0
l
1
l
2
l
2N1
l
2N1
l
0
l
1
l
2N2
l
2N2
l
2N1
l
0
l
2N3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
l
1
l
2
l
3
l
0
_
_
_
_
; 22
M
c
m
0
m
1
m
2
m
2N1
m
2N1
m
0
m
1
m
2N2
m
2N2
m
2N1
m
0
m
2N3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
m
1
m
2
m
3
m
0
_
_
_
_
; 23
where u
m
, t
m
, l
m
, and m
m
are shown below,
u
m
_
m
1
2
Dh
m
1
2
Dh
U
e
c
R; h; q; 0qdh
U
e
c
R; h
m
; q; 0qDh; m 0; 1; 2; . . . ; 2N 1;
24
t
m
_
m
1
2
Dh
m
1
2
Dh
T
e
c
R; h; q; 0qdh
T
e
c
R; h
m
; q; 0qDh; m 0; 1; 2; . . . ; 2N 1; 25
l
m
_
m
1
2
Dh
m
1
2
Dh
L
e
c
R; h; q; 0qdh
L
e
c
R; h
m
; q; 0qDh; m 0; 1; 2; . . . ; 2N 1; 26
m
m
_
m
1
2
Dh
m
1
2
Dh
M
e
c
R; h; q; 0qdh
M
e
c
R; h
m
; q; 0qDh; m 0; 1; 2; . . . ; 2N 1;
27
in which Dh 2p=2N and h
m
mDh and setting / 0
without loss of generality. The four matrices in Eqs. (20)
(23) have only N 1 dierent elements since rotation
symmetry with circulant property is reserved. By intro-
ducing the following bases for circulants, I; C
2N
1
;
C
2N
2
; . . . ; C
2N
2N1
, we can expand matrix U
c
into
U
c
u
0
I u
1
C
2N
1
u
2
C
2N
2
u
2N1
C
2N
2N1
;
28
where
C
2N
0 1 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1 0 0 0
_
_
_
_
2N2N
: 29
Based on the similar properties for the matrices of
U
c
and C
2N
, we have
k
Uc
l
u
0
u
1
a
l
u
2
a
2
l
u
2N1
a
2N1
l
;
l 0; 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N; 30
where k
U
c
l
and a
l
are the eigenvalues for U
c
and C
2N
.
It is easily found that the eigenvalues for the circulants
C
2N
, are the roots for a
2N
1 as shown below:
a
n
e
i2pn=2N
; n 0; 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N;
or n 0; 1; 2; . . . ; 2N 1: 31
The eigenvectors are
fv
l
g
1
a
l
a
2
l
.
.
.
a
2N1
l
_
_
_
_
: 32
The transformation matrix U is composed of the ei-
genvectors as
U
1
2N
p 1 v
l
v
2
l
v
2N1
l
_
2N
p
1 1 1 1
a
0
a
1
a
2
a
2N1
a
2
0
a
2
1
a
2
2
a
2
2N1
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
a
2N1
0
a
2N1
1
a
2N1
2
a
2N1
2N1
_
_
_
_
2N2N
:
33
Substituting Eq. (31) into Eq. (30), we have
k
Uc
l
2N1
m0
u
m
a
l
2N1
m0
u
m
e
iml2p=2N
2N1
m0
U
e
c
R; h; R; 0RDhe
imlDh
R
2N1
m0
U
e
c
R; h; R; 0e
imlDh
Dh: 34
When N approaches innity, the Riemann sum in Eq.
(34) can be transformed to the following integral,
1398 J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404
k
Uc
l
R
_
2p
0
U
e
c
R; h; R; 0e
ilh
dh: 35
By substituting U
e
c
kernel of Eq. (14) into Eq. (35), we
have
k
Uc
l
R
_
2p
0
ln R
_
pRcosh qRsinh c
1
m1
1
m
cosmh
_
e
ilh
dh
2pRlnR c; l 0;
p
R
jlj
; l 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N:
_
36
Also, we have
k
Tc
l
_
2p
0
p cosh
_
q sinh
1
m1
1
R
cosmh
_
e
ilh
dh
0; l 0;
p; l 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N:
_
37
Similarly, we can obtain the eigenvalues for the other
inuence matrices,
k
Lc
l
2p; l 0;
p; l 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N;
_
38
k
Mc
l
0; l 0;
p
jlj
R
; l 1; 2; . . . ; N 1; N:
_
39
By employing the SVD technique for a circular case with
U W, we can transform the dual equations in Eq. (18)
and Eq. (19) into,
URU
T
ftg URU
T
fug; 40
URU
T
ftg URU
T
fug; 41
where U and W are the left and right unitary vector,
respectively, the superscript T denotes the transpose
and
R
Uc
2pRln R c 0 0
0 pR 0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0 p
R
N1
_ _
0
0 0 0 p
R
N
_ _
_
_
_
_
2N2N
;
42
R
T
c
0 0 0
0 p 0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
0 p 0
0 0 0 p
_
_
_
_
2N2N
; 43
R
Lc
2p 0 0
0 p 0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0 p 0
0 0 0 p
_
_
_
_
2N2N
; 44
R
Mc
0 0 0
0
p
R
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0 p
N1
R
_ _
0
0 0 0 p
N
R
_ _
_
_
_
_
2N2N
: 45
The static stiness matrix can be expressed as
K U
c
1
T
c
L
c
1
M
c
; 46
where ftg Kfug in Eqs. (40) and (41) can be rewrit-
ten as,
ftg UR
1
U
c
R
Tc
U
T
fug; 47
ftg UR
1
Lc
R
M
c
U
T
fug: 48
The diagonal matrix, R
K
, can be determined by
R
K
R
1
U
c
R
T
c
R
1
L
c
R
M
c
: 49
Based on the inverse for the matrices of R
Uc
and R
Lc
, we
have
R
1
Uc
1
2pRln Rc
0 0
0
1
pR
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0
N1
pR
0
0 0 0
N
pR
_
_
_
2N2N
;
50
R
1
L
c
1
2p
0 0
0
1
p
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0
1
p
0
0 0 0
1
p
_
_
_
_
2N2N
: 51
It is interesting to nd that the static stiness matrix for
the circular case is shown below,
K UR
K
U
T
; 52
where
R
K
0 0 0
0
1
R
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
N1
R
0
0 0 0
N
R
_
_
_
_
2N2N
: 53
J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404 1399
We obtain the stiness matrix analytically no matter
that the values of p, q and c are specied. However, the
U
c
matrix may be singular once ln R c 0 in Eq.
(50). In this case, the stiness matrix can only be ob-
tained analytically. If the numerical instability can be
suppressed, we can determine the stiness numerically.
This indicates that the rigid body mode and the com-
plementary solutions result in a degenerate scale such
that ln R c. In the conventional BEM c 0, the
radius of a circular membrane equal to 1 is a degenerate
scale problem. To deal with this problem, the truncated
singular value decomposition (TSVD) technique in
conjunction with the concept of pseudo-inverse [6,8]
have been employed to calculate the stiness matrix [7].
It is found that the same stiness matrix can be obtained
from the auxiliary system by superimposing pRcosh
qRsinh c in the dual integral formulation. All the
above results are summarized in Table 2. Instead of
using UT formulation, it is found that LM formulation
can determine the stiness for any case as shown in Eq.
(51). Another alternative to deal with the degenerate
scale problem is CHEEF method [5].
4. Discussions of the rigid body mode and spurious mode
in case of degenerate scale using the Fredholm alternative
theorem and SVD updating technique
In the above analysis, we nd that the degenerate
scale stems from a singular inuence matrix. The rela-
tions between the rigid body mode and the degenerate
scale will be studied mathematically and numerically in
this section.
Fredholm alternative theorem:
The equation Hfug ff g has a unique solution if
and only if the only continuous solution to the homo-
geneous equation
Hfug f0g 54
is fug f0g. Alternatively, the homogeneous equation
has at least one solution if the homogeneous adjoint
equation
H
y
f/g f0g 55
has a nontrivial solution f/g, where H
y
is the transpose
conjugate matrix of H and f/g must satisfy the con-
straint ff g
y
f/g 0. If the matrix H is real, the
transpose conjugate of a matrix is equal to transpose
only [14], i.e., H
y
H
T
. By using the UT formulation,
we have
UT formulation : Uftg Tfug ff g: 56
According to the Fredholm alternative theorem, Eq.
(56) has at least one solution for ftg if the homogeneous
adjoint equation
U
T
f/
1
g f0g 57
has a nontrivial solution f/
1
g, in which the constraint
f
T
/
1
0 must be satised. By substituting Eq. (54) to
ff g
T
f/
1
g 0, we obtain
fug
T
T
T
f/
1
g 0: 58
Since fug is an arbitrary vector for the Dirichlet
problem, we have
T
T
f/
1
g f0g: 59
Based on Eqs. (57) and (59), we have
U
T
T
T
_ _
f/
1
g f0g or f/
1
g
T
U T f0g: 60
Eq. (60) indicates that the two matrices have the same
spurious mode f/
1
g corresponding to the same zero
singular value when a degenerate scale problem occurs.
Table 2
The stiness matrices and degenerate scales for a rod, a beam and a circular membrane
The fundamental solution Stiness matrix Degenerate scale
1-D rod U
c
s; x
1
2
jx sj as c K
EA
l
1 1
1 1
_ _
1 2al 4c
1-D beam U
c
s; x
1
12
jx sj
3
as bs
2
ds
3
c
K
EI
l
3
12 6l 12 6l
6l 4l
2
6l 2l
2
12 6l 12 6l
6l 2l
2
6l 4l
2
_
_
_
_
1 12dl
3
24al 48c
2-D circular
membrane
U
c
s; x
ln R pRcosh qRsinh c
K U
0 0 0
0
1
R
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
0
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
0
N1
R
0
0 0 0
N
R
_
_
_
_
2N2N
U
T
ln R c
1400 J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404
By using the SVD technique for the U
T
and T
T
matrices, we have
U
T
W
U
R
U
U
T
U
;
T
T
W
T
R
T
U
T
T
:
61
By substituting Eq. (61) into Eq. (60), we have
j
r
U
j
fw
U
j
gf/
U
j
g
T
f/
U
i
g
f0g/
i
/
j
d
ij
!
r
U
i
fw
U
i
g f0g; i no sum;
j
r
T
j
fw
T
j
gf/
T
j
g
T
f/
T
i
g
f0g/
i
/
j
d
ij
!
r
T
i
fw
T
i
g f0g; i no sum;
62
where the superscripts T and U denotes the T and
U matrix, respectively, f/
i
g and fw
i
g are the ortho-
normal bases, r
U
i
and r
T
i
are the zero singular values
of U and T matrices, respectively. We can easily ex-
tract the eigensolutions since there exists the same spu-
rious mode f/
i
g corresponding to the zero singular
values (r
U
i
r
T
i
0).
Rod and beam cases:
The U matrix for a rod is singular when
1 2al 4c. This results in the degenerate scale
problem. Without loss of generality of l 1, we can
reconstruct the UT formulation as shown below,
1
2
a
1
2
a
1
2
a
1
2
a
_ _
u0
u1
_ _
c
1
2
a c
1
2
c a c
_ _
t0
t1
_ _
:
63
According to the Fredholm alternative theorem, the
degenerate scale depends on the rigid body term. A
special case of a 0 and c
1
4
results in a degenerate
scale. By employing the SVD technique, we have
T
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
_ _
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
_ _
1 0
0 0
_ _
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
_ _
T
; 64
U
1
4
1
4
1
4
1
4
_ _
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
_ _
1
2
0
0 0
_ _
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
1
2
p
_ _
T
: 65
The spurious mode f/
1
gto satisfy Eq. (60) for U and
T in Eqs. (64) and (65), respectively, is found to be
f/
1
g
1
2
p
1
1
_ _
21
; 66
where
U
T
f/
U
1
g 0fw
U
1
g; Ufw
U
1
g 0f/
U
1
g: 67
It is interesting to nd that the rigid body mode is shown
below,
fw
T
1
g
1
2
p
1
1
_ _
21
; 68
where
Tfw
T
1
g f0g: 69
The spurious mode fw
U
1
g and the rigid body mode
fw
T
1
g are shown in Fig. 2.
Similarly, the spurious mode f/
U
1
g and the two rigid
body modes fw
T
1
g and fw
T
2
g are determined and are
shown in Table 3 and Fig. 2 for the beam case.
Circular membrane case:
The U matrix for the 2-D circular membrane is
singular when lnR c 0. This results in the degener-
ate scale problem. Using the degenerate kernels and
circulants for a circular membrane, we can reconstruct
the UT formulation as shown below,
U
Uc
R
Uc
U
T
U
c
ftg U
Tc
R
Tc
U
T
T
c
fug; 70
where R
Uc
and R
Tc
can be found in Eqs. (42) and (43).
According to the Fredholm alternative theorem in con-
junction with SVD updating technique, we have the
spurious mode f/
1
g
f/
1
g
1
2N
p
1
1
1
.
.
.
1
_
_
_
_
2N1
; 71
where f/
1
g satises
U
T
T
T
_ _
f/
1
g f0g: 72
After we obtain the spurious mode f/
1
g, we can
extract fw
U
1
g by
Ufw
U
1
g f0g: 73
It is interesting to nd that the rigid body mode is
shown below,
fw
U
1
g
1
2N
p
1
1
1
.
.
.
1
_
_
_
_
2N1
: 74
Although we have solved the singular problem by
superimposing a rigid body mode c in the fundamental
solution, this can be done in the matrix level by using
J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404 1401
Fig. 2. The rigid body mode and spurious mode for a beam and a rod in BEM.
Table 3
The rigid body mode and spurious mode for a rod, a beam and a circular membrane in case of degenerate scale
Degenerate
scale
Spurious mode (Di-
richlet problem)
Special case Rigid body mode
(Neumann problem)
1-D rod 1 2al
4c
U
T
T
T
_ _
42
f/
1
g
21
0
a 0, c
1
4
, l 1
f/
1
g fw
1
g
1
2
p
1
1
_ _
21
T
T
M
T
_ _
42
fw
1
g
21
f0g
1-D
beam
1 12dl
3
24al 48c
a 0, b 0, c
1
48
, d 0, l 1
U
T
T
T
_ _
84
f/
1
g
41
0
(f/
1
g
0:632
0:632
0:316
0:316
_
_
_
_
41
fw
1
g
0:774
0:258
0:516
0:258
_
_
_
_
41
)
T
T
M
T
_ _
84
fw
1
g
41
f0g
fw
2
g
0
0:577
0:577
0:577
_
_
_
_
41
)
T
T
M
T
_ _
84
fw
2
g
41
f0g
2-D cir-
cular
mem-
brane
ln R c
U
T
T
T
_ _
4N2N
f/
1
g
2N1
0
f/
1
g fw
1
g
1
2N
p
1
1
1
.
.
.
1
_
_
_
_
2N1
T
T
M
T
_ _
4N2N
fw
1
g
2N1
f0g
1402 J.T. Chen et al. / Computers and Structures 81 (2003) 13951404
U
_
af/
U
1
gfw
U
1
g
T
_
ftg Tfug; 75
where a 2Ncl
i
, l
i
is the element length. The a is a
nonzero constant which can be understood as the rigid
body motion. Eq. (75) can be rewritten as
r
U
i
f/
U
i
gfw
U
i
g
T
_
af/
U
1
gfw
U
1
g
T
_
ftg
r
T
i
f/
T
i
gfw
T
i
g
T
_ _
fug: 76
To demonstrate that the solution is reserved in the
modied form of Eq. (76) in comparison with Eq. (70),
the proof is shown below.
Proof. To prove that the solution for Eqs. (70) and (75)
are the same no matter what the value a is. By expressing
the boundary data fug and ftg in terms of generalized
coordinates fpg and fqg for unitary vectors, we have
fug W
T
fqg; 77
ftg W
U
fpg: 78
Substituting Eqs. (77) and (78) into Eqs. (70) and
(75), we have
0p
1
f/
1
g r
2
p
2
f/
U
2
g r
N
p
N
f/
U
N
g
0q
1
f/
1
g rr
2
q
2
f/
T
2
g rr
N
q
N
f/
T
N
g; 79
ap
1
f/
1
g r
2
p
2
f/
U
2
g r
N
p
N
f/
U
N
g
0q
1
f/
1
g rr
2
q
2
f/
T
2
g rr
N
q
N
f/
T
N
g; 80
where r
i
and rr
i
are the singular values of U and T
matrices, f/
U
i
g and f/
T
i
g are the left unitary vectors in
U
U
and U
T
as shown below:
U
U
f/
1
g f/
U
2
g f/
U
N
g
_
; 81
U
T
f/
1
g f/
T
2
g f/
T
N
g
_
: 82
By taking the inner product for Eqs. (79) and (80)
with respect to f/
1
g
T
, we have
0 p
1
0 q
1
; 83
ap
1
0 q
1
: 84
The degenerate scale results in a indenite form Eq.
(83) where p
1
can not be determined. After the shifting
process in Eq. (80), p
1
is found to be zero in Eq. (84).
By taking the inner product of Eqs. (79) and (80) with
respect to f/
U
j
g j P2, both equations reduce to
the same one,
p
j
N
k2
rr
k
q
k
C
jk
; 85
where
C
jk
/
U
j
/
T
k
: 86
This indicates that the shifting process in Eq. (70)
does not perturb the solution for the original Eq.
(75).
5. Conclusions
Based on the dual BEM, we have derived analytically
the same stiness no matter that the rigid body mode
and the complementary solutions are superimposed in
the fundamental solution for general structures. It is
found that degenerate scale depends on the fundamental
solution which is superimposed by the rigid body mode
and the complementary solution. Also, it is interesting to
nd that the linear term can not change the position of
degenerate scale for a circular membrane. Based on the
Fredholm theorem and the SVD updating technique, the
spurious mode was derived for the degenerate scale
problem. By shifting the zero singular value using the
rigid body mode and spurious mode in the matrix level,
the singular matrix can be desingularized which is found
to be equivalent by adding a rigid body term in the
fundamental solution. The relations between the rigid
body mode and the degenerate scale were also examined.
Illustrative numerical examples including rod, beam and
membrane were demonstrated to show the validity of
the formulation.
Acknowledgement
Financial support from the National Science Council
under grant no. NSC-90-2211-E-019-006 for National
Taiwan Ocean University is gratefully acknowledged.
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