Metric description of singular defects in isotropic materials (Q2347190): Difference between revisions

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Metric description of singular defects in isotropic materials
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    Metric description of singular defects in isotropic materials (English)
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    27 May 2015
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    From the abstract: ``Classical elasticity is concerned with bodies that can be modeled as smooth manifolds endowed with a reference metric that represents local equilibrium distances between neighboring material elements. The elastic energy associated with the configuration of a body in classical elasticity is the sum of local contributions that arise from a discrepancy between the actual metric and the reference metric. In contrast, the modeling of defects in solids has traditionally involved extra structure on the material manifold, notably torsion to quantify the density of dislocations and non-metricity to represent the density of point defects. We show that all the classical defects can be described within the framework of classical elasticity using tensor fields that only assume a metric structure. Specifically, bodies with singular defects can be viewed as affine manifolds; both disclinations and dislocations are captured by the monodromy that maps curves that surround the loci of the defects into affine transformations. Finally, we show that two-dimensional defects with trivial monodromy are purely local in the sense that if we remove from the manifold a compact set that contains the locus of the defect, the punctured manifold can be isometrically embedded in a Euclidean space.'' After giving some background information on defects in solids in Section 1, the authors review the theory of connections including curvature and torsion in Section 2 in the context of defects. Universal cover, deck transformations and monodromy is covered in Section 3. Several Examples for the classical defects are analyzed in Section 4 with respect to the mathematical theory introduced in Sections 2 and 3.
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    singular defect
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    isotropic
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    dislocation
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    disclination
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    point defect
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    connection
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    curvature
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    torsion
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    monodromy
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    classical elasticity
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