CALCULUS OF VARIATIONS
A
y
x=x 0
B
x
Figure 22.6 A frictionless wire along which a small bead slides. We seek the
shape of the wire that allows the bead to travel from the originOto the line
x=x 0 in the least possible time.
Now, from (22.17) the conditionδI= 0 requires, besides the EL equation, that
atx=b, the other two contributions cancel, i.e.
F∆x+
∂F
∂y′
η=0. (22.19)
Eliminating ∆xandηbetween (22.18) and (22.19) leads to the condition that at
the end-point
(
F−y′
∂F
∂y′
)
∂h
∂y
−
∂F
∂y′
∂h
∂x
=0. (22.20)
In the special case where the end-point is free to lie anywhere on the vertical line
x=b, we have∂h/∂x= 1 and∂h/∂y= 0. Substituting these values into (22.20),
we recover the end-point condition given in (22.16).
A frictionless wire in a vertical plane connects two pointsAandB,Abeing higher thanB.
Let the position ofAbe fixed at the origin of anxy-coordinate system, but allowBto lie
anywhere on the vertical linex=x 0 (see figure 22.6). Find the shape of the wire such that
abeadplacedonitatAwill slide under gravity toBin the shortest possible time.
This is a variant of the famous brachistochrone (shortest time) problem, which is often
used to illustrate the calculus of variations. Conservation of energy tells us that the particle
speed is given by
v=
ds
dt
=
√
2 gy,
wheresis the path length along the wire andgis the acceleration due to gravity. Since
the element of path length isds=(1+y′^2 )^1 /^2 dx, the total time taken to travel to the line
x=x 0 is given by
t=
∫x=x 0
x=0
ds
v
=
1
√
2 g
∫x 0
0
√
1+y′^2
y
dx.
Because the integrand does not containxexplicitly, we can use (22.8) with the specific
formF=
√
1+y′^2 /
√
yto find a first integral; on simplification this yields
[
y(1 +y′^2 )
] 1 / 2
=k,