Volume formed by a moving triangle
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Hello,
A pressure ff (not force) is applied to the three points of a triangle. The triangle is moving during the time ΔtΔt (t2-t1), and I know the coordinates of each point, namely
t1: p1(x1,y1,z1),p2(x2,y2,z2),p3(x3,y3,z3)
t2: p1(xx1,yy1,zz1),p2(xx2,yy2,zz2),p3(xx3,yy3,zz3)
I also know the velocity as a vector for each point
t1: p1(v1x,v1y,v1z),p2(v2x,v2y,v2z),p3(v3x,v3y,v3z)
t2: p1(vv1x,vv1y,vv1z),p2(vv2x,vv2y,vv2z),p3(vv3x,vv3y,vv3z)
I know this is not 100% right expression, but I want to know how much energy this pressure, p, bring to the system

6 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 23 Sep 2022
The velocities are not the same, but are they constant? If so you can express the positions with a simple parametric formula, calculate the parametric area of the triangle, and integrate that area over time.
If the velocities are not constant then in theory you can still do that, but the area might no longer be a simple parametric formula, and you might run into problems with positions overlapping previous positions, leading you to need to make definitions about what it means for a volume to be swept out.
Miraboreasu
on 23 Sep 2022
Chunru
on 23 Sep 2022
You can use the answer provided below for each time interval, assuming that points are not moving back to the volume formed earlier.
Bruno Luong
on 23 Sep 2022
Not clear why you ask for volume or energy. Energy is the work,
integral of the force x distance = integral of force x velocity dt = integral pressure / area * v dt
Volume is simmpy
integral area * v dt
They doesn't seem equivalent at all to me.
Miraboreasu
on 3 Oct 2022
Edited: Miraboreasu
on 3 Oct 2022
Is the normal to the triangle always equal to the direction in which the triangle is swept ?
Otherwise, you will have to integrate. Something like
V(t) = A*integral_{t'=0}^{t'=t} dot(n(t'),v(t')) dt'
where A is the area of the triangle, n(t') is the (unit) normal vector to the triangle and v(t') is the velocity vector at time t'.
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