[ \dot{x} \sin \theta - \dot{y} \cos \theta = 0 ]
This is a differential equation. Can you integrate it to find a relationship between $x, y,$ and $\theta$ alone? No. Because you can change the skateboard’s orientation without changing its position (spin in place), and you can move it along a closed loop and return to the same orientation but a different position (think parallel parking). dynamics of nonholonomic systems
But nonholonomic constraints are different. They restrict the velocities of a system, not its positions, in a way that cannot be integrated into a positional constraint. The classic example? A rolling wheel without slipping. Take a skateboard. Its position in the plane is given by $(x, y)$ and its orientation by $\theta$. That’s 3 degrees of freedom. Now impose the “no lateral slip” condition: the wheel’s velocity perpendicular to its orientation must be zero. [ \dot{x} \sin \theta - \dot{y} \cos \theta
In nonholonomic systems, we cannot. The constraints are linear in velocities, so we can use Lagrange multipliers to enforce them. But here’s the deep part: (in the ideal case). That means D’Alembert’s principle still holds—but only for virtual displacements consistent with the constraints. The classic example
This non-integrable velocity constraint is the hallmark of a nonholonomic system. The skateboard can access all possible $(x, y, \theta)$ configurations—no positional restriction—but it cannot move arbitrarily between them. Its velocity is constrained at every instant. In holonomic systems, we can reduce the problem: express velocities in terms of a smaller set of generalized coordinates and their derivatives. Lagrange’s equations then apply directly.
Welcome to the world of , where the rules of classical mechanics get a subtle, often counterintuitive, twist.
Most introductory physics courses teach constraints through the lens of a bead on a wire or a pendulum. These are holonomic constraints: they reduce the number of independent coordinates (degrees of freedom) needed to describe the system. A bead on a fixed wire has 1 degree of freedom instead of 3. Simple.