Author: Litton, E;Buston, J M
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Litton, E;Buston, J M
The Structural Engineer, Volume 46, Issue 11, 1968
The paper describes a series of static and dynamic tests which were conducted with two full-scale steel chimneys at the Central Electricity Generating Board, National Tower Testing Station, Cheddar, in the autumn of 1966. D. Sewell
The paper describes a method for the dynamic analysis of complex frameworks assuming a distributed mass-stifiness criterion. When compared with the lumped mass-stiffness technique, the proposed method is more accurate for the detcrmination of the response and natural frequencies of such frameworks. Moreover, the lumped mass technique discusses only a limited number of vibration modes, depending on the number of lumped masses assumed by the idealized system. The proposed method, however, trcats the framework as an infinite degrees of freedom system and thus will discuss all its possible modes of vibration. The method is also compared with the 'Duncan receptance technique' showing its superiority especially when dealing with highly redundant complex frameworks. M.E. Mohsin and E.A. Sadek
The matrix methods of structural analysis are, by now, well known. However, once large structures, such as the present-day skyscrapers, that consist of a vast number of components, are dealt with, various difficulties arise. Some of these difficulties are due to the fundamental approach to structural problems, while others are due to the speed and storage facilities of contemporary computers. A third group of difficulties is due to the various techniques that may be used in the processes of analysis, iteration, etc. K.I. Majid and D. Anderson