In 1890 Bryan observed that when a vibrating structure is rotated the vibrating pattern rotates at a rate proportional to the rate of rotation. During investigations of the effect in various solid and fluid-filled objects of various shapes, an interesting commonality was found in connection with the gyroscopic effects of the rotating object. The effect has also been discussed in connection with a rotating fluid-filled wineglass. A linear theory is developed, assuming that the rotation rate is constant and much smaller than the lowest eigenfrequency of the vibrating system. The associated physics and mathematics are easy enough for undergraduate students to understand.
Reference:
Joubert, SV, Shatalov, MY and Fay, TH. Rotating structures and Bryan’s effect. American Journal of Physics, Vol.77(6), pp 520-525
Joubert, S., Shatalov, M., & Fay, T. (2009). Rotating structures and Bryan’s effect. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3928
Joubert, SV, MY Shatalov, and TH Fay "Rotating structures and Bryan’s effect." (2009) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3928
Joubert S, Shatalov M, Fay T. Rotating structures and Bryan’s effect. 2009; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3928.