Former good article nomineeCatenary was a Mathematics good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
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Archive 1

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Old posts are archived here. Phancy Physicist (talk) 05:05, 4 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Gaudi, derivation by forces

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This problem has been open for quite a well, but I checked my father's guide book from when we visited Barcelona (there's a fair section on Gaudi), and there is a very famous story of him hanging ropes and measuring the distances to produce the curves shown. As you probably know, that produces a catenary.


Derivation by forces: Suppose A to be the gravitation acceleration vector, λ the linear density, T to be the tension, φ to be the tangent angle, and s to be the arc length. Then

 

Assuming Aλ=(0,-1) we get

 
 
 
 
  (k arbitrary)
 
  (C arbitrary)

which is a known Whewell equation. (Got a suggestion how to bridge that? I think it'll convert into the y' DE that follows...)

PS: that last eq'n is sort of obvious; one can handwave that the horizontal component of tension is constant and the vertical obviously has to equal the weight which is proportional to arc length. And that's probably how Bubbaloo first did it. But it's nice to know the top, general eq'n (eg if you're doing the skipping rope sometimes used for vertical wind turbines, or the constant-strain catenary...It'd've saved me hours on another tinker, a chain hanging in a plane rotating on a vertical axis.) 142.177.169.142 03:37, 18 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Duh. Converting that to (x,y) is easy. Roughly:
         
         
 
142.177.169.142 04:42, 18 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Derivation by minimal energy: Minimise   where U is the gravitational potential, λ the linear density, and s the arc length. Assume Uλ=y, let ' denote d/dx, and change variables

minimise  

The Euler characteristic   gives

 
 
 

which is satisfied by   (Got a suggestion how to bridge that magic?) 142.177.169.142 23:26, 17 Aug 2004 (UTC)

S'pose one could do the usual guessing until   comes up. Then   and   which gives  . Vertical translations require adding a constant to the potential (!). 142.177.24.163 14:19, 18 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Gaudi's Casa Mila

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Gaudi's arches are described in this article as catenaries--which may well be true. However, they are also used (in fact, an identical photograph of them is used) in the article entitled "Parabola" sn an example of THAT shape, which unfortunately means that one of these claims must be wrong. Anybody know the answer? (I'm leaving basically this exact post on the discussion page of that other article, in the hope that someone will more likely come across this issue and clear it up.) --Buck

Read the first paragraph again for the first time: The author asserts that the parabola and the catenary look similar but have different mathematical formulas.StevenTorrey (talk) 17:46, 5 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

The article on Gaudi states he was fascinated by paraboloids and parabolic arches. That article also identifies the arches as parabolic. It would seem that the arches probably are parabolic. Either that or that article should be disputed as well.

I've been to Barcelona and seen the stringed contraptions he used to design the buildings. Since they are always three dimentionally curved I would presume that none of the arches are exact catenaries or exact parabolas. Maybe we should precede each mention with "approximate"
The photo mentioned below doesn't appear in the Parabola article anymore. I guess thats a good thing . . . Lansey (talk) 23:44, 24 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • The foto used in the Parabloa article is named "parabola", and in the description is said to be describing catenarys. The confusion seems to be total: anybody has access to a real book about Gaudi?Mossig 16:12, 30 November 2006 (UTC)Reply
I found a reference that the arches are centenaries and added it to the image caption.--RDBury (talk) 20:07, 5 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

Did you mean 'centenaries' or 'catenaries'? In the dictionary, I find no definition of 'centenary' related to suspension cables. Please, let's not confuse people more than necessary! The mistake can be corrected by the author.StevenTorrey (talk) 17:46, 5 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

I meant 'catenaries', slight case of dyslexia.--RDBury (talk) 18:39, 5 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Towed cables - clarification needed

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The section about towed cables could perhaps become a separate article.

The subject of the section must be properly introduced. Does it talk about a cable being towed from one end? From both ends? A cable that floats on a water surface and is towed from one end, assumes a straight line. A cable hanging down from a boat in motion, or from a tower in wind, is a different scenario. Please tell the reader what she should have in mind when reading.

What is "the incident angle"? The angle between the tension forces and the drag forces at a given point of the cable? The direction of a water or air flow with respect to the orientation of a section of the cable? Without a stated scenario, it is hard to know. It should be said explicitly if we are talkning about quantities at a point on the cable, or about quantities defined for the whole cable.

So a critical angle is one that does not change? Does not change along the cable? Does not change with time? I do not understand what this is. Under what conditions does this fenomenon arise? "Far from significant point forces" does not cut it for me. Most hanging cables are subject to point forces only at the ends, towed or not. What angle does not change for most of the length of such cables? What shape does a cable assume when it hangs in steady wind with one free end? A straight line? A straight line only if the the ratio of drag forces to weight satisfies some condition? This is not obvious.

g=9.81m/s^2 - sounds like the accelleration of gravity?

And 'a', what does this letter stand for in the equations? Accelleration? So the equation is a dynamic one? Perhaps I could infer that from the equation for dT/ds, since this becomes zero if 'a' is zero. But then I must first figure out what 's' is, which is the next question. But even if 's' is 'slope', is it reasonable that dT/ds be zero in absense of accelleration? I don't know.

"'s' is the cable scope". Slope, perhaps?

It would probably be a good idea to state explicity what coordinate system is being used. The x axis horizontal, the y axis vertical, and the cable lying in the x-y plane? Gravity acting in the negative y direction, etc. What about a cable suspended horizontally and subject to a horizontal wind or water flow perpendicular to the line through the ends? Such a cable would lie in a non-vertical plane.

This brings up the question, if 's' is 'slope', what slope? Assume a coordinate system O-xyz, with z pointing up, and the ends having y=0. The midle of the cable can have non-zero 'y' coordinates.   is one possible slope.

Regards, PerezTerron 21:11, 14 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Physics of the Catenary

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Maybe someone who understands it could explain how   comes from the mass of a hanging chain. The less mass causing less of a curve makes sense, but the derivation of the expression would be nice.

Dmbrown00 03:40, 15 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

If the mass is uniformly distributed then it doesn't affect the shape. A light string and a massive chain will follow the same curve if they are the same length and assumed to have no stretch and no stiffness. Nophead (talk) 14:32, 16 September 2020 (UTC)Reply

Explanation

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It depends on what maths you want to use. You can't avoid calculus on this, and usually it is done via undergraduate ordinary differential equations. However, it is possible to do it just using standard integral calculus, with a bit of knowledge / intuition of how parametric curves work. (This intuition is usually informed by physics, so we are OK here.) Here goes:

  1. Assumptions: Suppose the chain has linear density ρ and that the tension at the lowest point is τ.
  2. Parameterisation: Suppose curve is described parametrically as (x(t),y(t)), where t is the distance from the lowest point. Since t is the distance along the curve (i.e. (x(t),y(t)) moves along the curve with "constant speed" wrt t) we have that (x'(t),y'(t)) is a unit vector. So we have:
    • (x'(t))2 + (y'(t))2 = 1
    • (x'(t),y'(t)) is a tangent vector to the curve. No harm in assuming x'(t)≥0 and y'(t)≥0.
  3. Tension: Between the lowest point, where the tension vector is (τ,0), and another point (x(t),y(t)) is chain of length t, mass ρt, which is subject to vertical gravitational force ρgt. By resolving three vectors,
    • the tension vector at (x(t),y(t)) is (τ,ρgt)
  4. Flexibility: since the chain is perfectly flexible at (x(t),y(t)), the tension vector (τ,ρgt) is aligned with tangent vector (x'(t),y'(t)). Hence
    • y'(t) / x'(t) = ρgt / τ, so y'(t) = t x'(t) / a
    • Here a = τ / ρg is a constant, which you can interpret as some sort of relative horizontal tension.
  5. Combining equations: 1 = (x'(t))2 + (y'(t))2 = (x'(t))2 + ( t x'(t) / a )2 = ( 1 + t2 / a2 ) (x'(t))2.
  6. Solve for x'(t) and y'(t):
    • x'(t) = 1 / ( 1 + t2 / a2 )1/2
    • y'(t) = t x'(t) / a = t / ( a2 + t2 )1/2
  7. Integrate to find x(t) and y(t):
  8. Eliminate t: t = a sinh( x / a ) and so y = a cosh ( x / a )

Voila! Andrew Kepert 10:30, 4 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Who discovered the equation?

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The 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica says the equation was found by James Bernoulli in 1691. However the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive has the same year but says the equation of the curve was found by Leibniz, Huygens and Johann Bernoulli (James' brother) responding to a challenge by Jacob (=James) Bernoulli.

Is there any way to resolve this? Until it is I vote for applying the maxim, "When in doubt, be vague," and just list all the names without trying to assign credit to who did it first.--RDBury (talk) 15:20, 12 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Artistic and Practical Applications of Approximate Catenary Curves

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The caternary curve, in addition to being a mathematical topic is also a practical one. As can be seen by the architectural examples, some forms of the curve, or near visual approximations to it, have an aesthetic appeal ( and engineering properties ) that has been used in a number of areas by designers and artists.

The hang of chain necklace around the wearer's neck approximates a catenary curve (see the initial diagram in the article), and is a matter of aesthetic interest to jewelry designers. One wonders how the better designs are created -- whether it is on the basis of sketching from life or imagination, or from more explicit knowledge of the mathematics of caternaries. The aim here is to elucidate whether mathematical training in this area might improve designs.

Recently, at least one mechanical igloo making device, the "Icebox" [see: http://www.grandshelters.com/icebox-design.html] claims to employ a catenary curve section for the snow shelter constructed, it is reported for the strength of this form, but probably also for its aesthetic. It would be interesting to examine the mechanical device involved (which I have not seen) in relation to the mathematics of the article. It actually constructs a shell structure representing a 360 degree rotation of the curve (of course with entrances, etc.-- technically I suppose it is a 180 degree rotation of the full curve, 360 degrees for the half profile). My impression is that this may be a different curve than that found in traditional, more hemispherical, arctic igloos which employ wind compacted and sintered snow, but possibly one more suitable for the hand packed snow used in this case, which would be found at lower latitudes in loose condition and becomes packed on stuffing into the device's form -- not that this tidbit is particularly germane to the article...comes from living in Canada and building snow forts and shelters as a child.

Is there room for strengthening the article in this direction a little, or perhaps starting a parallel article on the catenary curve in design and architecture? More on Gaudi's use of ropes to do his designing would be interesting.

--FurnaldHall (talk) 11:27, 12 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Any info about catenary domes?

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I have seen the idea of building a dome using the same idea as when constructing arches, namely using a catenary form (though the equation would become different because a dome is 2-dimensional while an arch is 1-dimensional), see Hexagonal Geodesic Domes - Catenary Domes. I was wondering if this is a good idea and if it could improve the stability of a dome much? Or is a dome in general already stable as it is, thanks to it's mean curvature? --Kri (talk) 19:26, 27 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

I've tried looking this up but can't find a lot of material. As near as I can tell, with a dome each element is subject not only to the forces of the elements immediately above and below it as in the arch, but the elements to either side. The net effect of the side elements is a horizontal force that can vary to balance out the other forces involved. The upshot is that, as long as certain inequalities are met to keep the horizontal forces pointing inward, there is a lot more possible variation the shape possible.--RDBury (talk) 22:06, 21 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

Problems with Towed cables section, class promotion

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My feeling is that this article is nearly ready to be promoted to B+ class but the Towed cable section is standing in the way of this. The problems with this section are outlined in a previous comment. I'm currently working on a more mathematical version of the section which uses more familiar terminology and idealizes the physics (ignoring gravity and tangential drag) so that it becomes possible to find a closed form equation for the curve. From what I can find, towed cables are a well-studied engineering topic which is sufficiently notable for a separate article. But such an article should be located on the Engineering portal and not here.--RDBury (talk) 18:35, 5 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

The new version of the section is done. I also added Towed cable to the requests for new articles.--RDBury (talk) 15:14, 8 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

Elastic Catenary

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After looking at the equation relating mass density at a point to the unstretched mass density,   I believe it to be incorrect. Here is my argument: This formula says that the density can be given by knowing the unstretched mass density, the spring constant of the cable, and the tension in the cable. I will exibit two springs with equal parameters when unstretched, but with differing parameters when stretched.

Consider two springs, the first an inch long, the second a mile long. The small spring is made from a stretchy material compared to the longer spring, so that the difference in length makes their spring constants equal (since longer springs tend to have smaller spring constants.) Further, the mass density of these springs when unstretched can be made the same by distributing the mass equally (so the mile long spring is much more massive than the inch long one). Now suppose we apply an equal tension to both springs, enough to extend the small spring twice its unstretched length (1 additional inch). Since the larger spring also has the same spring constant, it will, too, stretch one inch. Notice that the small spring's mass density has halved (since the mass is the same but the spring is twice as long), but the density of the mile long spring has hardly changed at all, since 1 inch is negligible in comparison to a mile (by a factor of 1 in 63360). This shows that two springs with the same tension, unstretched density, and spring constant can have different stretched densities, which proves that the formula for stretched density cannot be a function of these parameters alone.

Where on earth did this formula come from? It isn't even referenced.

Danielkwalsh (talk) 08:14, 25 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

However, If   is not a spring constant but instead is defined by  , then this formula holds. Perhaps this should be made more clear. I think I may make this correction to the page.

Danielkwalsh (talk) 09:25, 25 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Vandalism in Reference

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Reference #11 is vandalized. I couldn't find the original reference in the recent diffs. Somebody needs to fix it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Subh83 (talkcontribs) 17:20, 13 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

The anagram was introduced in this revision [1] and apart from being moved to a reference it seems to have been unchanged. I can't see any vandalism. I think its actually got too many e's I make it 5 e's and 8 i's giving
abcccddeeeeefggiiiiiiiillmmmmnnnnnooprrsssttttttuuuuuuuvx
rather than
abcccddeeeeeefggiiiiiiiiillmmmmnnnnnooprrsssttttttuuuuuuuux
The original phrase was "Ut pendet continuum flexile, sic stabit contiguum rigidum inversum".--Salix (talk): 18:00, 13 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

I discussed the error in the anagram on my blog in July 2010: http://newtonexcelbach.wordpress.com/2010/07/14/arches-anagrams-and-plagiarism/. At the time there were 121 Google hits for an exact search on the incorrect version, and just 3 to the correct version (one of which was a plagiarised version of my words). There is now one more site with the correct version, here. DougAJ4 (talk) 10:35, 18 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Ctesiphon Arch

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According to the article, the Ctesiphon Arch is "roughly but not exactly a catenary". The problem is that it is also "roughly but not exactly" any number of other simple curves, including an ellipse and a parabola. I have never seen any convincing mathematical evidence that it is any closer to a catenary than to other candidate curves. Is there any? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.186.36.105 (talk) 01:15, 26 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

I have examined the shape of the arch, compared with a catenary and parabola, here: http://newtonexcelbach.wordpress.com/2008/06/08/the-roof-of-the-taq-i-kisra/. The analysis is certainly a bit rough and ready (due to lack of detailed information about the actual shape of the arch), but it does suggest that it is closer to a catenary than a parabola. In the following post I have looked at the effect of different shapes on the stresses in the arch. DougAJ4 (talk) 10:44, 18 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Proposal of new figure and rewrite of "Derivation"

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I have a new figure that I think is very explanatory and a new derivation that I think is shorter, clearer and more elementary then what presently is in the article. Any protest against a re-write (about!) like this:


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The forces acting on a segment of catenary curve are shown in the figure below

 
Catenary

The vector sum of the forces acting on the segment from the two extremities and from the gravitational force must be zero. As the gravitational force is directed downwards the horizontal components of the forces acting on the extremes must have the same magnitude. As this is true for any segment of the catenary this is a fixed constant for the whole of the catenary. Denoting this constant with   one gets that the vertical component of the force at the left extreme   is   and at the right extreme   is   The path length of the curve representing a function   with   varying from   to   is

 

If   is the gravitational constant and   is the mass per length unit of the chain the gravitational force acting on the arc from   to   is  

This force must be compensated by the vertical components of the forces acting on the two extremes of the arc, i.e.

  (1)

For the function

 

one has that

  (2)

and that

  (3)

It follows that

  (4)

From (1), (2) and (4) follows that if   the vector sum of the vertical force components at the extremes   and   for any arc will take the value needed to compensate for the gravitational force acting on the arc.

From the relation

 


follows that for any two points   and   in a vertical plane and any positive number   one can find values   such that the function   passes through both points, i.e. such that:

 


 

By selecting the parameter   properly the length of the curve as given by (4) can be given any desired value larger then   where   is the distance between the two points.


From the figure is clear that the tension of the chain at any point   is  

Stamcose (talk) 20:32, 30 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

I would like to replace the sections "Derivation", "Alternative1" and "Alternative2" to (essentially!) the text above next week! Any objections? Please word these objections (if any!) the next few days!

Stamcose (talk) 20:21, 5 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think that your derivation is good but I don't think it should replace the other ones. You should add it as another method. The method you present is "guess the solution and try it", which is completely valid but kind of relies on the fact that you know the answer. I know it strictly doesn't require previous knowledge but I think you'll know what I mean. Also I don't see any reason to reduce the amount of information on Wikipedia.
Phancy Physicist (talk) 04:33, 6 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Why does so much space appear above the figure? I don't remember enough about SVG at the moment to look at it, but could that be cleaned up? /ninly(talk) 00:14, 6 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

The figure above is good but I would like to see some labels on the force vectors.
Phancy Physicist (talk) 04:37, 6 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

It is true that it always is problematic to remove stuff. Although I do not think the present derivations are good or even rigorous (correct!) I do not insist on removing them. If other people want to keep them (and certainly the author!) it is OK with me.It is certainly an inevitable effect of the Wikipedia system that the articles get (too?) voluminous and poorly structured!

The space on the top of the figure annoyed me too! It comes from the conversion tool PostScript => SVG that is recommended by Wikipedia (in the Help pages). Now I have made myself (without any third party tool!) a properly sized SVG:

 
Catenary

The analytical solution of differential equations is really always to guess/find a class of solutions from which the uniquely defined solution satisfying the boundary conditions can be constructed. A typical example is the elementary differential equation

  where one guesses and verifies that   and   and any linear combination of these are solutions from what follows that any solution is a linear combination of these functions as the boundary values completely define the solution

Stamcose (talk) 23:08, 6 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

What part of the old proofs do you question? I am not the original author so don't worry about offending me. I just don't see anything wrong with them.
Phancy Physicist (talk) 05:19, 8 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

The problem with the present derivation is that author absolutely wants to use the "natural parametrization"   which is the arc length. But in this very case this is a detour that brings nothing but confusion!

The present

 


is with my notations (without s)

 

where   is the constant horizontal component of the force what in the present text is denoted  .

As   simply is   and   the expression

 

is simply

 

With my notations this is

  (1)

as by definition   has been selected such that  

This relation is clear from my figure and my very short argument saving the confusing round about in the present text.

I simply say that the two parameter family of functions

 

are the only solutions as by selecting   and   properly any value for   and   can be obtained.

One can also go ahead as follows what clearly is the intention of the present text:


Denoting   with   and taking the derivative of both sides one gets the equation

 

or

 

which is integrate to

 

where   is the constant of integration

The other constant of integration   is then obtained integrating  

I do not think it is much difference between "guessing and finding" a primitive function to   and to "guessing and finding" a two parameter family of solutions to a second order differential equation!


I do not myself understand the very last arguments of the present text but the arguments above are the (clear!) arguments that should be given!

Stamcose (talk) 20:44, 8 December 2010 (UTC) And this should be the final figure with the right size for Wikipedia and with subtitle thanks to "frame" in the tag!Reply

 
The forces acting on the two extremes of a segment of a catenary decomposed into horizontal and vertical components

Stamcose (talk) 20:44, 8 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think I am more or less ready with a new version of "Derivation"! Any protests? Any additional suggestions?


++++++++++++++++


The forces acting on a segment of catenary curve are shown in the figure below

 
The forces acting on the two extremes of a segment of a catenary decomposed into horizontal and vertical components

The vector sum of the forces acting on the segment from the two extremities and from the gravitational force must be zero. As the gravitational force is directed downwards the horizontal components of the forces acting on the extremes must have the same magnitude. As this is true for any segment of the catenary this is a fixed constant for the whole of the catenary. Denoting this constant with   one gets that the vertical component of the force at the left extreme   is   and at the right extreme   is   The path length of the curve representing a function   with   varying from   to   is

 

If   is the gravitational constant and   is the mass per length unit of the chain the gravitational force acting on the arc from   to   is  

This force must be compensated by the vertical components of the forces acting on the two extremes of the arc, i.e.

  (1)


Denoting the constant ratio   with   and taking the derivative of equation (1) with respect to the upper limit of the integral, i.e. with respect to  , one gets

 

Denoting   with   this equation takes the form

 

what means that for the inverse function   one has

 

which is integrate to

 

where   is the constant of integration or equivalently

 

Again integrating with respect to   one gets

  (2)

where   is the second constant of integration

The length of the curve given by (2) from   to   is {NumBlk|:| |3}}


This family of solutions is parametrized with the 3 parameters  . For any concrete case these 3 parameters must be computed to fit the boundary value conditions. In a typical case the form of a chain having a given length l and being attached in two fixed point with the coordinates   and   relative a vertical coordinate system should be computed.


This means that   have to be determined such that

  1.   (4)
  2.   (5)
  3.   (6)

Setting

 
 

subtracting (4) from (5) and then dividing with   one gets

  (7)

For any given values   one can determine   from (7)

When   has been determined   is computed by solving a quadratic equation.

With   known (4) or (5) can subsequently be used to determine  

Having determined   with the algorithm just described the curve length   corresponding to the selected   value can be computed from (6). With an iterative algorithm the   value that corresponds to a certain curve length   can finally be derived.


From the figure it is further clear that the tension of the chain at any point   is   where   is the magnitude of the constant horizontal force component

If the mass density   is not constant but varies depending on some law the resulting differential equation will not have an exact analytic solution anymore. But the resulting curve can be determined with arbitrary accuracy also in this case using an algorithm for the numerical integration of ordinary differential equations.

Taking the derivative of equation (1) with respect to the upper limit of the integral, i.e. with respect to  , without assuming   to be constant one gets

 

Denoting   with   one gets the following first order differential equations

 
 

Given any initial values for   and   and any value for the parameter   these differential equations can be propagated to   with   specified as any function of the state variables  . The free parameters to be iteratively adjusted to fit the boundary constraints are now   and  . They can for example be adjusted iteratively such that   where   is the second attachment point. This leaves an additional degree of freedom corresponding to for example the length of the curve.

For the "elastic catenary" one would for example have that   where   is the mass density without any stress.


Stamcose (talk) 17:15, 9 December 2010 (UTC)Reply


To check the case "elastic catenory" with a mass density (mass per unit lenth) of   where   where is the "stress force" I integrate numerically the differential equations


 
 


Where  

But the resulting curve had only small deviations to a normal catenary! Even the physically completely un-realistic case of an   product with the value 10 the deviation was un-spectacular, just about visible for the bare eye on a plot.

As the theoretical analysis of this case also is "sick" I would propose to remove these items completly! It was an interesting idea to include these generalisations (in the beginning of 2008) but a closer analysis has now shown that it was not all that fruitful after all!

Stamcose (talk) 16:16, 10 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Proposal of new figure and rewrite of "Towed cables"

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The present derivation is absolutely correct but it refers to the formula

 

that is stated in this article but not has been proven or explained in detail here. The proof I give here is in fact essentially a proof of this relation!

In this talk page it is also stated (above) that "clarification is needed"!


I think this more straightforward version illustrated by a figure is more digestible for the reader

++++++++++++++++++++

The following figure illustrates a segment of a cable that is fixed in both ends and exposed to drag.

 
Figure 2:The forces acting on a segment of a cable subject to drag. The medium causing the drag is moving downwards. The drag force is orthogonal to the cable and the forces acting on the two extremities of the segment compensate the net drag force on the segment

The velocity relative to the cable is assumed to be constant and the coordinate system is selected such that this velocity is in the -y direction, i.e.  . To compute the force due to drag, write  

where   and   respectively are the components parallel to and orthogonal to the cable. The cable is assumed to be smooth so the force on the cable due to   is taken to be negligible. The force acting on the cable, per unit length, following the Drag equation is therefore

 

with

  (1)

where   is a constant depending on the density of the fluid, the diameter of the cable, and the Drag coefficient and   denotes the unit normal vector.

For any curve   the tangent (unit vector) is

  (2)

and the normal (unit vector) is

  (3)

From (1) and (3) follows that

  (4)

From (3) and (4) follows that the x-component of the total force on the segment of the curve from   to   is


  (5)


and the component in the y-direction is

  (6)

If now

 

one has that

 

and from (2),(5) and (6) that

  1.   (7)
  2.   (8)

If the now the force in the cable is

 

the force at the right extreme of the cable segment is

 

and at the left extreme

 

From (7) and (8) follows that the vector sum of these forces is precisely the force needed to counter act the forces on the segment caused by the drag

Stamcose (talk) 13:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Citations and sources are needed

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Please be sure that all additions to the Catenary article are verifiable. Any new items added to the article should have inline citations for each claim made. As a courtesy to editors who may have added claims previously, before Wikipedia citation policy is what it is today, many of the existing unsourced claims have been tagged {{citation needed}} to allow some time for sources to be added.

More specifically, to all of the recent discussion on derivations, and a new derivation that may soon be added to the article, Wikipedia is an encyclopedia for verifiable that can be sourced from reliable secondary sources with a citation for substantial assertions. It is specifically not for original reseach. While I personally do not plan to challenge any of the unsourced proofs at this time, I think it is fair to say that a lot of unsourced information won't stand the test of time, and will be winnowed out over the longer term as Wikipedia emerges from myriad individual actions. Net: I think you should source the new derivation you are planning to add to the article. N2e (talk) 16:57, 18 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

The only place in the mathematical part where "Citations and sources" is lacking is in the "Equation" part. But
 ,
is just the definition so the tag "citation needed" is irrelevant here. On the contrary a reference to the derivation of
 .
 
 .
could be relevant!
Stamcose (talk) 10:34, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply
Actually, even a simple definition, which is an absolute "truth" to you and I who understand mathematics, is not something that is "known" to all readers of this encyclopedia. That is why WP has the core policy of verifiability, let's get it cited and improve the article. N2e (talk) 15:59, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply
Ref (a current calculus textbook) added for the simple definition. /ninly(talk) 17:27, 2 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Modifications by 165.246.99.227

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In my opinion the contribution now called "5.3 Analysis" should be fully replaced with what presently is "7. Alternative analysis". But by preference (as a courtecy!) the main author of this section should agree to this first and do this himself. The mathematical imperfections of "5.3 Analysis" has already been discussed above. If "7. Alternative analysis" appears longer it is because it goes much further, it explains how to solve the boundary value problem! And "Towed cables" is also in the pipeline!

Who else has an opinion about this matter?

Stamcose (talk) 16:58, 21 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think the 5.3 section start a lot better than the 7 section, it introduces all the different forces explaining what they are rather than just referring to a picture with unlabelled force vectors. Both are much to long, is not wikipedia's job to give a detailed derivation more indicate the key points and provide references where these can be checked. Both currently fail WP:OR. --Salix (talk): 17:41, 21 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Most readers that not are mathematicians will certainly just glance over this type of text without the intention of follow it in detail. Then it should simply be as short as possible. But for the benefit of those who really make the effort to go into the details the mathematics should be correct and logical. This is not really the case with the present "5.3 Analysis". For example:


The present

 


is with my notations (without s)

 

where   is the constant horizontal component of the force what in the present text is denoted  .

As   simply is   and   the expression

 

is simply

 

With my notations this is

  (1)

as by definition   has been selected such that  

This relation is clear from my figure and my very short argument saving the confusing round about in the present text.

Stamcose (talk) 10:16, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Too many analyses and "alternative analyses" without reference

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This article contains too many different analyses and alternative analyses with lots of mathematical derivations but not referencing a single reliable source as to address why such analyses are useful or let readers verify whether they are correct. If proper references are given, there may not even be the need of documenting all the detailed derivations in Wikipedia. However I think much of these are original research and are candidates for removal (see WP:NOR). - Subh83 (talk) 06:04, 14 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

I concur. The maths could be better organized, and much reduced given that a lot of it is unsourced. Don't have time for much more analysis tonight, but will be glad to help weigh in on improving the article. Ping me if you want any other looks. N2e (talk) 04:14, 15 March 2011 (UTC)Reply
I agree even though I contributed much of the math. The material does seem to be hard to organize though. There are several ways to analyze the problem and many ways to generalize it (non-uniform density, add elasticity, more general force) which are covered in the literature on the subject. One method of analysis may be best for some generalization and not for others, so I think presenting several methods gives a better understanding of subject.
As I see it, the analysis can be divided into three parts: I) Derive a differential equation(s) for the curve. II) Integrate the differential equation(s) to obtain a Cartesian equation. III) Apply parts I and II to derive other properties. Part I can proceed by a) analyzing a small section of the curve, b) analyzing a large section of the curve and applying the principle that the curve at equilibrium may be treated as rigid, c) using calculus of variations. From my recent reading there is actually more material that could be added, but I am planning to go through the existing material with an eye toward more rigorous referencing and to remove what seems to be OR. Much of the existing derivation comes from [2] and related pages. I'm also thinking that it would be better to put a very simple derivation for the basic catenary first, rather than derive general formulas which is the current approach.--RDBury (talk) 15:25, 11 September 2011 (UTC)Reply
I did some reorganization and rewriting of the analysis sections so everything either has cites or is marked with an unreferenced tag. I used Routh as a source for most of it since it seems to be a definitive text, though Minchin seems nearly as complete. I added some new material as well but there is still more that could be added.--RDBury (talk) 01:07, 16 September 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think that the reorganization and rewriting has made the article much better, and the overall sourcing and cites are quite good. Thanks for doing that RDBury! N2e (talk) 00:22, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Towed cables

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Most towed cables are fixed at only one end, e.g., at the towing ship. See, for example: A. P. Dowling, “The dynamics of towed flexible cylinders. Part 2. Negatively buoyant elements.” Journal of Fluid Mechanics 187, 533-571, 1988. Figure 1 in that reference depicts a typical geometry for towed cable catenary calculations.

The assumption of negligible drag parallel to the cable is not typically made for these types of calculations. Many such cables are a mile long or longer, and the tangential drag becomes a major contributor to the cable tension, which can have a significant effect on the catenary. Most such solutions must be performed numerically. Psalm 119:105 (talk) 02:06, 20 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

The Dowling ref. was in the article several years ago but was removed. In the old version of the section it looks like the formulas were copied from the article with little explanation of how they were derived or what the variables meant. In any case, the towed cable problem seems to be a variation of Bernoulli's sail problem, and there is much more material available on that, so I'm planning to replace the section with a fully referenced one on sails.--RDBury (talk) 13:16, 21 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Simple suspension bridges, citation needed

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I restored the statement that Simple suspension bridges follow a catenary curve though I don't have a source at the moment. It is relevant, in fact it's kind of the point of the section, and rather obvious since in this case the bridge is the chain, not to mention that this type of bridge is also called a catenary bridge. This is mentioned in the other article but I haven't been able to verify the sources there since they always seem to be in "not included in preview" pages.--RDBury (talk) 15:20, 6 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Since there is an editor who keeps deleting the statement, and since it's kind of the point of the section, I've commented out the section until the issue can be resolved. Hopefully someone can find a cite so the material can be restored.
It seems blindingly obvious. -- 202.124.74.120 (talk) 04:58, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Spider web

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Re change of web photo text from "... multiple elastic catenaries..." to "...multiple (approximate) catenaries...". Change comment is "Source needed to be specific". As far as I can tell the article describes elastic catenaries and so is self referential. Is this a valid reference? Mtpaley (talk) 18:11, 7 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

I'm trying to strike a balance between having verifiable captions and being so careful that real world images can't be used. I added several of these images in an effort to make the subject more interesting for non-mathematical readers. I think at some point an appeal to WP:Likely to be challenged must be made. That the spider web threads follow an elastic catenary could be challenged since there are several assumptions involved, for example that the threads follow Hooke's law. But I don't think there can be much doubt that the threads follow the basic assumptions of catenary, that they are flexible threads where the forces of tension and its own weight are at equilibrium, and therefore follow the curve at least approximately.--RDBury (talk) 23:51, 8 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Huygens vs. Jeffeson

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The sentence "Thomas Jefferson is usually credited with the English word catenary." seems to be contradicted in MacTutor, which has "Huygens was the first to use the term catenary in a letter to Leibniz in 1690... ." This is repeated in the MathWorld article. The passage in question seems to be Appendix II of the letter dated 9 October 1690 which can be found here. The passage is in Latin (though the main body of the letter is in French) and the word Huygens uses is catena (or a conjugate such as catenae, never catenaria as claimed in the article). The title of the appendix has the phrase curvae catenae which would translate to "chain curve". The appendix does seem interesting from a historical point of view, it's basically a summary of what was known at the time on the subject, but it seems doubtful that the claim in MacTutor can be substantiated. I'm therefore removing our mention of the Huygens letter from the article, at least until there is a more clear explanation of how it contributed to the etymology of the word.--RDBury (talk) 14:27, 12 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

PS. MacTutor was apparently using Lockwood as a source, "The name was the first used by Huygens in a letter to Leibniz in 1690." It's not clear from the context what "name" is meant, indeed it was apparently misinterpreted by MacTutor. It's possible that what Lockwood meant is that Huygens first used the phrase curvae catenae, but I think it's more likely that Lockwood was quoting (and possibly misinterpreting) yet another source.--RDBury (talk) 15:13, 12 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

"Catenary" bridges follow a catenary curve?

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We've gone back and and forth a couple times on whether the statement that a catenary bridge follows a catenary curve should be included in the catenary article. It seems to be that there is insufficient reason to delete the statement since WP:V only specifies that statements which are "challenged or likely to be challenged must be attributed". To me the statement is obvious and is not likely to challenged, and so should not be removed since it is encyclopedic and relevant to the subject. I have not removed the cite needed tag though since a reference would be nice to have to bring the article to GA standard. Do you have a reason to challenge the truth of the statement? If so then I should point out that it is repeated several times in Simple suspension bridge. In any case, without the statement the section is only about parabolas and bridges and has little to do with the catenary, so I've commented it out until the issue can be resolved.--RDBury (talk) 11:18, 12 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Well, as I understood the statics in a mechanical design class I took once, these bridges only approximate a catenary shape, for a variety of practical reasons like differential unit mass, non-uniformity of attachment points to the support cables, non-ideal atmospheric reality, etc. But as usual in Wikipedia, we should not make such claims, either way, out of our heads and based on what we recall from former studies, we should make claims that are verifiable, or leave them out until someone can support the claim with a reliable source. That is why I removed the claim, which had not been supported with a citation despite one having been asked for over a year ago. Cheers. N2e (talk) 13:20, 12 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Your objection seems to be that the mathematical model of the bridge can never be exactly equal to an actual bridge, and this is true if you go into fine enough detail. But this is like saying that a billiard ball is not a sphere because if you examine it under a microscope you can find imperfections in the surface, or that a laser beam does not follow a straight line because of changes in air density. Any mathematical statement about the real world is really about an idealized representation of an object rather than the actual object, this is understood implicitly and without this kind of assumption mathematics is only an intellectual exercise with no application. If you still have the text from your design class then perhaps you can add what it has to say about the bridges to the article. I'll be happy to have some kind of statement, even if it's an approximate one, rather than not covering the material at all.--RDBury (talk) 18:46, 12 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Well, a couple of comments. First off, the article is excellent overall now and I will be happy with what you decide, either way. To your specific comments, however, I should respond directly. I think that your comment about the catenary not following catenary shape (like a billiard ball to a perfect sphere) is a valid point, but is most applicable to, say, an anchor chain rode, of identical and equal segments, each connected at a single point, having identical mass both above and below the centerline of the connecting points, identical segments in all parts of the bridge, etc. Most "catenary" bridges are much rougher approximations due to a rather extensive set of nonlinearties in the bridge mass, and particularly because the center of mass of the bridge structure is typically far from the centerline of the tensioned structural member. So that is my thought about your specific comment.
Having said all that, you MIGHT want to consider the term "approximates a catenary shape" or "closely approximates a catenary shape" — as well as continue to look for the source that you, quite fairly, have noted in the article we are still looking for — but I will support whichever decision you come to. You have done an awesome job on improving this article!
Thanks for handling the discussion with such scholarly aplomb. Cheers. N2e (talk) 00:22, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
I'm not sure where this business about the centreline of the connecting points being far from the cables comes from. I haven't seen anything like that happening, you're not thinking of a normal suspension bridge are you? It would be possible even so to have something that deviated significantly from a catenary by using cables that were thinner in the middle, one doesn't need quite the same strength in the centre, but in actual practice they just use a cable or chain with a constant cross section, the essence of catenary bridges is simplicity. They follow a catenary very exactly except of course when somebody is walking over them. Dmcq (talk) 01:11, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
The simple suspension bridge is essentially just a thick chain. It's as close to a catenary as a chain is (except when somebody is walking over it, as Dmcq says). I have added a reference to stressed ribbon bridges, for which clear sources do exist. -- 202.124.74.120 (talk) 05:19, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for finding the references and the other improvements, well done. Imo the article the ready for a GA review now, though I'll let the dust settle a bit before nominating it. @N2e, You're welcome though I can't say "aplomb" is something I always manage to maintain. Actually I owe you a thanks as well for giving the issue enough of a kick so that it got fixed. Thanks also for recognizing my contributions but it's a collaborative effort as any good WP article is, and my efforts are minor compared to what others have done.--RDBury (talk) 22:14, 13 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Catenary bridge?

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I would suggest a lot of caution in this section of the article. First, there is not a clear definition for a "catenary bridge," which you have named a section in the current article. Because bridge engineering is a well-researched science, use of the term "catenary bridge" could be original research. I recommend "catenary-shaped bridges."
Second, there is not a clear engineering definition of simple suspension bridge that matches the definition used in this article (see discussions at Talk:Simple_suspension_bridge#Verifiable_reference_needed, and Talk:Suspension_bridge#7th_Century_Maya_bridge)
Also, this edit uses a non-bridge engineering reference to make the major point of this section, that simple suspension bridge is a defined term and engineering research shows that when the deck follows the cables, the curve is a catenary. I think that this is a poor source for such the technical, well-researched subject of bridge engineering. - ¢Spender1983 (talk) 03:49, 14 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Also, this reliable mathematical reference used in the article says that a suspension bridge will be either a parabola or something between a catenary and parabola. So where is the reference that definitively says a simple suspension bridge that has a deck following the curve of the cable is a catenary? - ¢Spender1983 (talk) 04:18, 14 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

In response to both of those, the technical references (such as Lockwood, which you cite, but which you seem to have misunderstood) all say clearly that:

  1. if the load is distributed horizontally, as in a bridge with a suspended horizontal deck, the curve is a parabola,
  2. if the load follows the chain, it is a catenary, and
  3. if some load follows the chain and some load is distributed horizontally, intermediate curves result.

To explicitly state the obvious fact that (2) applies to simple suspension bridges, a non-bridge engineering reference (but nevertheless a reliable reference) was used. The phrase "catenary bridge" for a simple suspension bridge (and sometimes for a stressed ribbon bridge) is quite common in the bridge engineering literature. -- 202.124.73.186 (talk) 11:50, 14 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for the addition of the Troyano reference. It shows that there was some error in my original statement. Troyano gives a technical source for the term Catenary bridge and this source also meets the highest level of what counts as a reliable source: it is an academic publication from the field of bridge engineering. I still question the use of the Trinks reference in the article. Is a book about furnaces, written by a mechanical engineering professor, considered a good source for the academic subjects of either catenary curves or bridges? Especially now that a more reliable source has been added. - ¢Spender1983 (talk) 19:18, 19 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
There seems to be some disagreement over terminology, which is common problem in writing an encyclopedia because in many cases different authors use different terms for the same thing, or same term for different things, or even talk about a subject without giving it a name. The name "simple suspension bridge" is used here to mean bridges such as the Capilano Suspension Bridge where the roadway follows the suspending cables. If there is a more commonly used term for this type of bridge, as opposed to the usual kind of suspension bridge, then I have no objection to changing the terminology, but for now this term appears to be the most recognized. When Lockwood used the term "suspension bridge" he is clearly not including this type of bridge in the discussion so his conclusions don't apply here. In fact, though in general bridge design is well researched and covered in the literature, there seems to be very little on simple suspension bridges. This isn't surprising since they aren't practical except as foot bridges and they are comparatively low-budget, often hand crafted affairs. So I don't see a problem with using a non-bridge engineering source; if there is a bridge engineering source which says that the curve is not a catenary then I might give it more weight, but these sources don't seem to cover the subject so it's better to use a another source since the material is clearly encyclopedic.--RDBury (talk) 06:38, 16 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:Catenary/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Failedwizard (talk · contribs) 16:49, 18 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Rate Attribute Review Comment
1. Well-written:
  1a. the prose is clear, concise, and understandable to an appropriately broad audience; spelling and grammar are correct. Some minor things (there's lots of things that I would phrase differently but I don't think they'd improve the article much and I think they'd get in the way - I think the article currently has quite a nice voice)
  • There's an oddness with wikilinking - 'integrated' and 'Cartesian coordinates' are not, but 'posthumously is - links get much fewer further down the article.
  • "Catenary arches are often used in the construction of kilns. In this construction technique, the" should this be "In such construction techniques"?
  • I'd like to see more text in-between equations in the mathematical description section. It's very elegent, but the interested reader might get lost quite early.
  • 'Other properties' reads very much like a list that isn't quite one... I think making it into a paragraph (or a 'proper' list) would help.
  • "Balancing forces as before", can we expand on the 'before'? part....
  1b. it complies with the Manual of Style guidelines for lead sections, layout, words to watch, fiction, and list incorporation. As a development issue - I the lead most definitely needs to expansion to summarise the other sections in the article. Otherwise I'm happy with the layout and other criteria. Per Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Mathematics#Suggested_structure_of_a_mathematics_article I think the lead is also a bit higher level that might be desirable, although I can quite sympathise with problems in bringing it down again. There's been a little bit of improvement to the lead but I still don't feel that it quite covers all the major points.
2. Verifiable with no original research:
  2a. it contains a list of all references (sources of information), presented in accordance with the layout style guideline. Pending I think this is a noticeable area of weakness for the article. References 54 points us to the external links, some of the other references could really do with being linked to google books or similar and although I appreciate it would be a lot of work - It would be nice to see the references in the reference section be a link to the document in the Bibliography... the use of 'following' and the appreciation of 'Art.' is not ideal even for the informed scientific reader. UPDATE, this is looking a lot better...

}}

  2b. reliable sources are cited inline. All content that could reasonably be challenged, except for plot summaries and that which summarizes cited content elsewhere in the article, must be cited no later than the end of the paragraph (or line if the content is not in prose). Certainly the sources are solid (not a massive fan of mathworld being in there, but I'm happy with it for GA; however, as mentioned above I'm not entirely okay with the presentation of the references to readers...

Some very minor bits - can we source:

  • "possibly having seen Huygens' work on the catenary."
  • "He did not publish the solution of this anagram[14] in his lifetime, but in 1705 his executor provided it as Ut pendet continuum flexile, sic stabit contiguum rigidum inversum, meaning "As hangs a flexible cable so, inverted, stand the touching pieces of an arch.""
  • "Equations which define the shape of the curve and the tension of the chain at each point may be derived by a careful inspection of the various forces acting on a segment using the fact that these forces must be in balance if the chain is in static equilibrium."

just to be on the safe side.

  2c. it contains no original research. "A careful reading of his book Two new sciences[7] shows this to be an oversimplification. " looks ORish - is the Fahie source where the statement came from?
3. Broad in its coverage:
  3a. it addresses the main aspects of the topic. It's not my field, but there's enough nearby information to convince me.
  3b. it stays focused on the topic without going into unnecessary detail (see summary style). Hmm, maths article... I think certainly the casual reader would have been blown away by the later half of the article, but given that it is a maths article... I personally would drop the alternative derivation, but I'd be interested in hearing the editor's response to the suggestion...
  4. Neutral: it represents viewpoints fairly and without editorial bias, giving due weight to each. Hard to be particularly POV about a curve... :)
  5. Stable: it does not change significantly from day to day because of an ongoing edit war or content dispute. Appears fairly peaceful, at least for the last month. Had a couple of bits to look at going through the history but all appear to have been good give-and-take.
6. Illustrated, if possible, by media such as images, video, or audio:
  6a. media are tagged with their copyright statuses, and valid non-free use rationales are provided for non-free content. I'm fine with these, but this is absolutely an area of weakness for me and I'd appreciate anyone looking over my shoulder on this.
  6b. media are relevant to the topic, and have suitable captions. Definitely relevant, if anything there are too many images and this distracts somewhat from the text. Some development points - the caption "Arch of Taq-i Kisra in Ctesiphon as seen today is roughly but not exactly a catenary" sounds really interesting - but it's not mentioned in the main text and I think it should be (would be great to get a source involved for the statement as well). Also I'd like to see the images being a bit more consistently sized (on width), but that's personal preference rather than GA criteria and should be treated as such.
  7. Overall assessment. This is quite a shame, there's a solid article here, and I'd love to see it renominated, but it's time to cut this review. I'll keep it on my watchlist, and I'd happily review it again. I think the process has improved the article immensely, and I look forward to working with the editors in the future. Failedwizard (talk) 09:04, 28 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

User:RDBury responses and comments

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I'm just going to add comments and updates here as I address the various points given above.

  • 1a (bullet 1): I went through and added a bunch of wikilinks for terms that could be called technical or jargon, I've probably missed some so I'll keep an eye out or make another pass sometime. The link for 'posthumous' didn't go to a definition (as you might think) but to a general list of posthumous works. I'm guessing someone thought it was a good idea to link every occurrence of 'postumous' in WP to this list. I removed it for now. It's probably only natural that the links get more sparse lower down since the end of the article is aimed at a more technical audience. I'm assuming that anyone who's interested in the derivations has working knowledge of freshman calculus and enough physics to construct a force diagram. Some of the terms used, such as tangential angle, aren't always covered in a standard curriculum so I've tried to give explanations for these both in-text and in wikilinks. The last section uses terminology from sophomore level mathematics but I think that's unavoidable.
I like it, looks much better now, and I've marked off the relevant point in the list :) Failedwizard (talk) 21:40, 21 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
marked offFailedwizard (talk) 07:58, 10 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 1a (bullet 3): See the comment under 3b. I tried to keep mathematical formulas and jargon out of the material above the 'Mathematical description' section. Starting there the math does start to come in thick and fast, but I don't think this can be helped. The most basic equation for the curved involves the hyperbolic cosine which probably isn't familiar to a random person on the street. An article like this should serve both non-technical and technical readers and the bottom half of the article is targeted at the latter.
  • 1a (bullet 4): This looks tough and probably the best approach is to break up the section. Right now it's sort of a collection point for bits and pieces that don't seem to belong anywhere else, not the kind of thing where you can apply a quick fix. I'll continue working on it.
  • 1a (bullet 5): I rephrased this to make it more clear what this was referring to.
marked off Failedwizard (talk) 07:58, 10 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 1b: I rearranged and rephrased the lead so it should be clearer conform to WP:LEAD better. I also tried to put the more technical terminology in the second paragraph.
  • 2a: On ref 54 (now 55), the previous cite (Routh) is intended to be for the entire section and the note on Freeman is in the nature of a footnote pointing the reader to further information on suspension bridges. The Freeman article is a primary source and I didn't think there was anything of general enough interest to include in WP. Theoretically it could be separated out into a separate 'Footnotes' section but I think it's the only one so I don't see how that would make sense.
It's a tough call and I understand what's happening here - but I think we're in a situation in which we don't want to 'overload' the references with a random footnote - if it could be worded (in brackets maybe) in article that would be much easier on the eye.
  • 2a: On using "Following...": This is a way to indicate that the section or paragraph is being paraphrased from the source given rather that individual facts being cited. It would be impractical to have cites for every statement in a proof or derivation since they would all have the same information. Also, proof or derivation needs to be taken as a single unit, so it wouldn't make sense to cite individual statements anyway. I've been using the word "Following" in this situation because, as far as I know, the scientific citation guidelines aren't specific on how this should be done. If there are guidelines for this then I'll be glad to change the cites to conform to them.
Hmmm, I can see a few ways of doing it, but we're talking very much personal preferences - I've asked over at the manual of style [3] would you be happy with going with their recommendations, assuming they have any)? (don't worry about time on this one)
So we didn't get much of a response from MOS, so you're good for 'following' :) Failedwizard (talk) 07:58, 10 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 2a: On using "Art.": Routh, in particular, is organized into chapters and articles rather than chapters and sections. Routh use article numbers rather than page numbers when referring to passages in the book and article numbers and shown in the table of contents and at the top of each page. Generally articles are shorter than a page so using an article number is more specific than a page number. So I'm following the format used in the work being referenced for the location of a specific passage and I believe it's the most appropriate format more these cites.
I think we can agree that 'Article' might more descriptive than 'Art.'.. :) Also, you might like to consider linking the footnotes to the references like at Speech_generating_device, which makes things a bit easier for people to find. Failedwizard (talk) 21:40, 21 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
I added intra-article links to the cites. Art. seems to be a standard abbreviation for Article; it's more or less the same as using § for Section.--RDBury (talk) 13:38, 13 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 2b: I removed the statement given the first bullet. Statements beginning with "It's possible" or "Possibly" are difficult to falsify anyway. On the second bullet, I believe the Lindahall.org cite is meant to cover the entire paragraph so the statement should be cited already. I'm not entirely happy with the source though and will try to find a better one. The statement in the third bullet is meant to summarize and introduce the material that follows, in other words it's just there to improve the flow of the section. As such I don't think it needs a cite.
  • 2c: The Fahie cite is supposed to cover both sentences; I could easily combine them into a single sentence if it would help. Fahie is public domain so it shouldn't be too hard to add a link to it as well. This is a case where you could probably find as many if not more cites for the false version than the true one. Turns out the people who review math manuscripts for publications may be good at checking proofs and formulas but aren't so hot at following up sources on who said what (imo).
Not just math(s)... Anyway, I think you have a couple of options here - easist is probably just cite Fahie seperately for both sentances - that way it's a bit clearer that the statements are all coming from the same source. More elegant, might be to say "A careful reading of Galileo's book Two New Sciences, by Fahie shows this to be an oversimplification. (also you don't have to cite Galileo - although I'm aware it's nice to do so - it's the placement of the citations here that's giving the slightly OR feel... Failedwizard (talk) 21:40, 21 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
I rephrased the passage as a single sentence, it was a bit wordy as it was anyway.--RDBury (talk) 18:03, 13 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 3b: I think the alternative derivation is encyclopedic though I can see how it might seem redundant. Perhaps it doesn't come through in the article very well but while the first method considers the problem as one of finding a function of x, the second method is one of finding more general curves in the plane. In any case I think the two approaches are significantly different and when you try to adapt them to other problems (which is why I think the derivations have value in an encyclopedia), one works in some situations and the other one works in different situations.
I'm happy for this to be your call - but I think it would really help to have quite a bit more text spacing out the equations...
I went though and added text between the equations as much as I thought made sense. I also broke up a giant string of equations in the elastic catenary section. The derivation of this given in Encyclopédie des Formes Mathématiques Remarquables is more polished but it's unclear if it's a reliable (per WP) source.--RDBury (talk) 14:38, 3 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
  • 6b: I didn't think anyone would say there were too many images. Actually one of my favorite things about the article is that it has pictures of things that are outdoors rather than just having a bunch of equations and blackboard diagrams. I can't take the credit (or blame) though; as far as I recall the only one I added was one of the blackboard type images.
I added something on Ctesiphon to the History section and added a ref. There is a cite on the Taq-i Kisra article which might be better but it's "No Preview" on Google books.
Very happy with the changes made and I've marked it off on the table.Failedwizard (talk) 21:40, 21 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
So I just dropped by to see how you were getting on - there's been a nice number of edits and some well-reasoned and friendly responses, I particularly like that you're taking the time to edit many parts of the article and not just respond very tightly to suggestions. Let me know how you're doing regarding things like time, and if an extension might reflect well on the quality of the article. Failedwizard (talk) 21:40, 21 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
Some great work here, I've marked some more stuff off - the lede is the major thing that needs doing - much of the rest I can probably tidy up as I go past, but the lede is the major thing...Failedwizard (talk) 07:42, 19 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
I did work on the lead and I'm not sure what else should be done with it. It seems to me it covers the points in WP:MOSMATH#Article introduction and I don't see to expand it further without adding unneeded detail.--RDBury (talk) 15:00, 19 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
My issue is that the lead section should briefly summarize the most important points covered in an article in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article, currently the lead doesn't mention any points from Catenary#History, Catenary#Catenary_bridges, or Catenary#Anchoring_of_marine_objects, and actually could take a summary sentence from each of the more theory heavy sections. The lead should also establish notability, a clause like, "and have been studied by mathamatitions such as Galileo, Hook, and..." would sort that that. Does that sound sensible? Failedwizard (talk) 22:38, 19 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
I've added a couple of sentences to the lead. Gandalf61 (talk) 14:33, 20 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

Review of new sections

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Stamcose (talk · contribs) addedd these new sections to the catenary article. I deleted these new sections because:

  1. They were unsourced.
  2. They were too long, adding over 12kb to a 39kb article.
  3. They mostlty derive results and properties given elsewhere in the article.
  4. Lengthy derivations and proofs do not belong in Wikipedia - Wikipedia is not a text book.

The author has contested this deletion on my talk page. Other editors' views and opinions are requested. Gandalf61 (talk) 17:49, 17 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

I agree with the above. I would add that it could be considered WP:OR without any sources to backup this treatment.--Salix (talk): 18:04, 17 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Deletion by User Gandalf61

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1. A basic principle of Wikipedia is that you do not unilaterally delete text of others. Your personal opinion is not necessarily shared by others. That text is added but not deleted tend to make articles somewhat longish but this is not really a problem. People can read the part of the article that appeals to them.

I am strongly of the opinion that this "alternative analysis" is by far superior to the text it "duplicates". In addition interesting plots are included!

Stamcose (talk) 03:10, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

What basic principle? See WP:BRD. —Tamfang (talk) 07:12, 10 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

And in addition "unsourced" is clearly irrelevant here. This is a mathematical analysis that by its very nature is "selfsourcing".

Stamcose (talk) 03:18, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

That's a definite problem in mathematical articles, but completely opposed by Wikipedia policies. WP:CALC specifies the degree you can claim "self-sourcing"; anything beyond that requires reliable sources. Proofs can be placed in Wikibooks or Wikiversity (if it's still up) without worrying about Wikipedia's rules on original research. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 04:35, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply
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Asymmetric Catenary

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I have found very little information on the subject of asymmetric catenaries. I would like to see the equation of a cord catenary, where the ends are supported at different heights. The horizontal distance between the supports is known as are the properties of the cord (tension, weight/unit length etc) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Coli.white (talkcontribs) 22:20, 3 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Electrified railways

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A long, detailed article without a single mention of railway overhead electrification, of which catenary-suspended wires are an essential component! -- Picapica (talk) 21:50, 24 April 2018 (UTC)Reply

Analysis Section is confusing

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The equations under analysis are not straightforward at all. s is being used for the length of the chain, but then the variable s is also being used for an equation describing length of the curve. It's really confusing and I can't make any sense of it. Breebree214 (talk) 18:25, 11 March 2019 (UTC)Reply

In the description of a catenary and parabola, below the picture it says: The catenary and parabola equations are respectively, y = cosh(x) and y =x2 I think this should be y = cosh(x) and y =1 + ½ x2 87.254.72.195 (talk) 14:56, 27 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

Inconsistent formulae comparing catenary with parabola

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In the illustration comparing a catenary with parabola, below the picture it says: "The catenary and parabola equations are respectively, y = cosh(x) and y = x^2" I think this should be "y = cosh(x) and y = 1 + ½ x^2" 87.254.72.195 (talk) 15:02, 27 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

Alternate derivation

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New editor ‎R.zalman has recently added another derivation. (It is included below, collapsed, for reader convenience.) It is unsourced, and has been reverted as such. I think it is worthwhile to discuss (1) is it possible that it could be reliably sourced? and (2) if it were reliably sourced, would it be worth including in the article? --JBL (talk) 22:21, 2 February 2021 (UTC)Reply

Derivation of R.zalman
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.


Derivation via Variational Calculus

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This derivation avoids the complicated integrals encountered in other methods.

Given 2 points in 2D space,   and  , between which a rope will freely hang, find its shape and length  .

This in essence is an optimization problem; the solution is a path between the 2 points for which the potential energy is at a minimum. Calculus of Variations deals with that exactly: Given a path-integral dependent quantity, the Euler-Lagrange equation produces the path for which the quantity is extremized. In our case the quantity is the potential energy and the extremum is a minima.

The potential energy, where   is the differential mass element,   is the gravitational acceleration and   is the height of the differential mass-element.

Denote the rope density as  , so  . The differential length element rewrite as  , and now identify   as  .

With this we rewrite, Solving the optimization problem means we found the   such that the value of this integral is at minimum.

The Euler-Lagrange equation, treats   and   as independent variables, so the above differentiation has to be carried out accordingly, Manufacture the differential on the LHS, this is now simply integrated into, where   is some constant of integration.

rearrange,   is 0 iff   is a constant 0, which is not out solution. Since   is yet to be determined, we can rewrite this equation more compactly as, and considering this form, we see this   has to be positive.

We have now arrived at a 1st-order non-linear ODE which one can solve by either guessing   and solving the characteristic equation, or by differentiating to get, which is a well-known 2nd-order linear ODE which we know is solved by exponents of  . Any linear combination of these exponents is a solution to the ODE, but we are looking for the one that produces a symmetric curve (rope is horizontal at the vertex). One can verify that the only combination to satisfy this is the   function, so our solution is of the form, Now sub this into   to determine  , considering the hyperbolic identity  , this equation holds only if, choose either since   is symmetric, and the solution is, To get the  , fix the equation at the end of the rope, solve this numerically for   and the shape is fully determined.

The length can now be computed by directly integrating over the rope's length,

  using again the hyperbolic identity, one can rewrite this as, from which the length is immediately determined.

Path of a moving charge in a uniform electric field

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The claim in the "Science" section that the path of a moving charge in a uniform electric field follows a catenary, is incorrect. The path described in the cited book is actually a "squashed" catenary   with  , even though the book says "along a catenary curve". Note that the cited book uses x and y differently; I here use the sense used in the Wikipedia article. Specifically,   where   is the invariant mass of the moving charge, and   is its (constant) momentum along the x axis. Only in the limit where the moving charge travels at the speed of light does this become a true catenary.

I am uncertain how to best correct the claim (maybe just delete it?), as I am not a frequent contributor. For anyone who wants to verify this issue, note that equation (20.5) in the cited book has a typo: the right-hand numerator should be   instead of  . 81.191.117.202 (talk) 15:26, 10 December 2022 (UTC)Reply