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13. VIBRATIONS AND WAVES. Key words: Vibrations, Waves, Vibrational Motion, Periodic Motion, Simple Harmonic Motion, Restoring Force, Hook’s Law, Amplitude, Period, Frequency, Phase Angle, Angular Frequency, Simple Pendulum, Damped Motion, Critically Damped Systems, Force Vibrations, Natural (or Resonant) Frequency, Resonance, Mechanical waves, Pulse, Wave Velocity, Transverse Wave, Longitudinal Wave, Interference, Superposition Principle, Standing Waves, Nodes, Antinodes, Normal Mode, Constructive Interference, Destructive Interference. 13.1 Vibrations We have studied two types of motion – translational and rotational. Now we will begin to analyze a third basic type of motion – Vibrational Motion. Vibrational motion occurs very often in technology and nature. For example, all atoms in solids execute vibrational motion around the equilibrium positions. We will pay attention to a very common type of vibrational motion: periodic motion. Periodic Motion is motion that repeats itself in a definite cycle. It occurs whenever an object has a stable equilibrium position and is subject to a restoring force that acts when the object is displaced from equilibrium. When the restoring force is directly proportional to the displacement (we are familiar with a good example of this situation – the spring force from Hooke’s Law), which is often the case for small displacements, the resulting motion is called Simple Harmonic Motion or SHM. The oscillating object undergoes SHM if the Restoring Force follows the Hook’s Law: Restoring Force is proportional to the displacement. F = -kx (13-1) The maximum displacement from equilibrium is called the Amplitude, A. The Period, T, is the time required for one complete cycle (back and forth). The Frequency, f, is the number of cycles per second. They are related by T 1 f (13-2) The period of oscillations for a mass m on the end, of an ideal massless spring is given by T m k 2 (13-3) To find the position of an object as a function of time in SHM is not easy. We can write Newton ’s second law of motion for an object that performs SHM (sometimes it is called simple harmonic oscillatior or SHO) as follows: F ma kx ma k x m a (13-4) You can see from Equation (13-4), that acceleration in SHM is not constant and we can get the dependence x(t) using calculus. The result shows that SHM is sinusoidal. The general solution can be written as: x (13-5) A cos wt Where A is the amplitude, Φ is the Phase Angle, and w is the Angular Frequency. w 2 f k m (13-6) The values of A and Φ depend on the initial conditions (x and v at t = 0). During SHM, the total mechanical energy E 1 mv x 2 2 1 2 kx 2 1 2 kA 2 (13-7) const is continually changing from potential energy to kinetic energy and back again. From the basic energy relation in equation (13-7), we can determine the velocity of an object in SHM as a function of position. v k 2 A m x2 1/ 2 (13-8) According to equation (13-8), the maximum speed vmax occurs at x = 0. k A m vmax (13-9) A Simple Pendulum is an idealized model consisting of a point mass suspended by a weightless unstretchable string in a uniform gravitational field. A simple pendulum of length L approximates SHM if its amplitude is small and friction can be ignored. In this case, its period is given by T 2 L g (13-10) Equation (13-10) shows that for small oscillations, the period of a small pendulum for a given value of g is independent of its mass and amplitude and is determined entirely by its length. When friction is present (for all real springs and pendulums), the motion is said to be Damped Motion. The amplitude decreases in time, and the mechanical energy is eventually completely transformed to thermal energy. If the friction is very large, so no oscillations occur, the system is said to be overdamped. If the friction is small enough that oscillations occur, the system is underdamped, and the displacement is given by x Ae Lt cos w1t (13-11) Where L and w’ are constants. For Critically Damped Systems, no oscillation occurs and equilibrium is reached in the shortest amount of time. If an oscillating force is applied to a system capable of vibrating the amplitude of these Force Vibrations can be very large if the frequency of the applied force is near the Natural (or Resonant) Frequency of the oscillating object. This phenomenon is called Resonance. All mechanical structures – such as buildings, bridges, and airplanes – have one or more natural resonant frequencies. It can be disastrous to subject the structure to an external driving force at one of those frequencies. EXAMPLE 13-1. A spring scale stretches 2.8 cm when a 3.7 kg object hangs from it. (a) What is the spring constant? (b) What will be the amplitude? (c) What will be the frequency of vibration if the object is pulled down 2.5 cm more and released so that it vibrates up and down? X1= 2.8 cm = 0.028m m =3.7kg X2= 2.5cm = 0.025m a. k = ? b. A = ? c. f = ? (a) According to equation (13-4), Newton’s second law of motion for this case can be written as follows. F k ma kx1 1.30 10 3 mg k 3.7kg 9.80 mg x1 m s2 0.028m N m (b) Because the object will oscillate about the equilibrium position, the amplitude A will be the distance the object was pulled down from equilibrium. A x1 A 0.025m © According to (13-6), the frequency of oscillation will be f 1 2 k m 1.30 10 3 f 1 2 N m 3.7 kg ƒ = 3.0 s¬¹ = 3.0Hz EXAMPLE 13-2. A 0.60kg mass at the end of a spring vibrates 3.0 times per second with an amplitude of 0.13 m. Determine: (a) the velocity when it passes the equilibrium position; (b) the velocity when it is 0.10m from equilibrium; (c) the total energy of the system, and (d) the equation describing the motion of the mass assuming that displacement from the equilibrium position x was maximal at t = 0. m = 0.60kg f = 3.0Hz = 3.051 A = 0.13m t = 0, x = xmax (a) x = 0, v = ? (b) x = 0.10m, v = ? (c) E = ? (d) x = x(t) = ? (a) According to (13-8), the maximum velocity is at equilibrium position x = 0. k 2 A m v k A m v max v max v2 (b) v k 2 A m vmax 1 x2 x2 1/ 2 , f k 2 A 1 m x2 2.45 m s x2 vmax 2 1 A2 m 0.245 s A2 k m 2 fA 2 3.0 s _ 1 0.13m x2 1 2 1 0.10m 0.13m A2 2 x = 0.10m v 1.6 (c) v = vmax, x = 0 so, according to (13-7) E (d) m s 1 mvmax 2 2 1 m 0.60kg 2.45 2 s 1.80 J According to (13-5) the general solution for x=x(t) is x=A cos (wt+Φ) Because the object has maximal displacement at t = 0, we can deduce that Φ=0. Therefore, in this case, the position will be described by the function x = (0.13m) cos[(6.0π 1/s) t] 13.2 Mechanical waves. A Mechanical Wave is any disturbance from the equilibrium condition that propagates from one region of space to another through some material called the medium. Vibrating objects act as sources of waves that travel outward from the source. Waves on a water surface and on a string are examples. The wave may be a Pulse (a single crest) or it may be continuous (many crests and troughs). In a periodic wave, the motion of each particle of the medium is periodic. The wavelength λ of a continuous wave is the distance between two successive crests (or any two identical points on the wave shape). The frequency f is the number of full wavelengths (or crests) that pass a given point per unit time. The Wave Velocity v (how fast a crest moves) is equal to the product of wavelength λ and frequency f or the ratio of wavelength and period: v f T (13-12) The Amplitude of a wave is the maximum height of a crest, or depth of a trough, relative to the normal (or equilibrium) level. In a Transverse Wave the oscillations are perpendicular to the direction in which the wave travels. An example is a wave on a string. In a Longitudinal Wave, the oscillations are along (parallel to) the line of travel; sound is an example. The velocity of both longitudinal and transverse waves in matter is proportional to the square root of an elastic force factor divided by an inertia factor (or density). For a string, with mass per unit length in μ, and tension FT, the speed of transverse waves is v FT (13-13) When two waves pass through the same region of space at the same time, the Interference occurs. From the Superposition Principle, the resultant displacement at any point and time is the sum of their separate displacements. When a sinusoidal wave is reflected at a stationary [not movable] or free end, the original and reflected wave combine to make, at certain frequencies, Standing Waves in which the waves seem to be standing still rather than traveling. In this case, a medium is vibrating as a whole. This is a resonance phenomenon and the frequencies at which standing waves occur are called Resonant Frequencies. The points of destructive interference (no vibration) are called Nodes. Points of constructive interference (maximum amplitude of vibrations) are called Antinodes. The simplest case is standing waves on a string of length L; they can have only certain specific frequencies. When both ends are held stationary, the allowed frequencies fn are fn n v 2L nf1 n 1,2,3... (13-14) A Normal Mode is a motion in which all particles on the string move sinusoidally with one of the frequencies fn. Each value of fn corresponds to a different normal mode. Standing waves on a string are a simple example of an Interference effect - wave phenomena that occur when two or more waves overlap in the same region of space. According to the principle of superposition, if two periodic waves are in step at a point, then their amplitudes add together. This phenomenon is called Constructive Interference. If the waves are a half-cycle out of step at a point, the resulting amplitude is smaller and the phenomenon is called Destructive Interference. EXAMPLE 13-3.A sinusoidal wave travels along a string. The time for a particular point to move from maximum displacement to zero is 0.170s. What are the (a) period and (b) the frequency of an oscillation? (c) The wavelength is 1.40m, what is the wave speed? t = 0.170s λ = 1.40m (a) T = ? (b) f = ? (c) v = ? (a) The motion from the maximum displacement to zero (equilibrium position) is one-fourth of a cycle. Therefore T= (4)•(0.170s)=0.680s (b) f = 1/T = 1.471 1/s (c) v f 1.40m 0.680s T 2.06 m s EXAMPLE 13-4. (a) AM radio signals have frequencies between f1AM = 550kHz and f2AM = 1600 kHz and travel with a speed of 3.00 108 m . What s are the wavelengths of these signals (b) On FM, the frequencies range from f1FM = 88.0MHz to f2FM = 108MHz and travel at the same speed. What are their wavelengths? f1AM = 550 kHz f2AM = 1600kHz f1FM = 88.0 MHz f2FM = 108 MHz v 3.00 108 m s a. λ1AM = ? b. λ1FM = ? v a. f λ2AM = ? λ2FM = ? v f v 1 AM f1 AM v 2 AM b. f 2 AM v 1FM f1FM v 2 FM f 2 FM m s 3 550 10 Hz 3.00 10 8 m s 3 1600 10 Hz 545m 3.00 10 8 188m m s 6 88.0 10 Hz 3.41m m s 6 108 10 Hz 2.78m 3.00 10 8 3.00 10 8