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Simple Harmonic Motion Serway Chapter 15.1, 15.2 Practice: Chapter 15, problems 5, 7, 8, 15, 65 Oscillatory Motion Motion in the real world may not fit some of our earlier models (linear or circular motion, uniform acceleration). Many phenomena are repetitive or oscillatory. Example: Block and spring M Equilibrium: no net force M The spring force is always directed back towards equilibrium. This leads to an oscillation of the block about the equilibrium position. M F = -kx M x For an ideal spring, the force is proportional to displacement. For this particular force behaviour, the oscillation is simple harmonic motion. Simple Harmonic Motion x(t) t In Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM), the displacement is a sinusoidal function of time, e.g.,: x ( t ) = A cos ω t or x ( t ) = A sin ω t Question: Is a bouncing ball described by SHM? x(t) t In general, x ( t ) = A cos( ω t + φ ) Phase The quantity (ωt + φ) is called the phase, and is measured in radians. The cosine function traces out one complete cycle when the phase changes by 2π radians. The phase is not a physical angle! Three constants specify the motion: Amplitude, A : maximum displacement from the centre Angular Frequency, ω Initial phase (or phase constant), φ QUIZ A weight suspended from a spring oscillates up and down so that its height above the floor varies between 30 cm and 50 cm. The amplitude of the oscillation is: A) B) C) D) E) 10 cm 20 cm 30 cm 40 cm 50 cm The period T of the motion is the time needed to complete one cycle: x(t) = A cos (ωt+φ) = A cos (ωt+φ+2π) The motion repeats when the phase (ωt + φ) increases by 2π radians; x (t + T) = x(t) if ωT = 2π radians (or 360°). 2π ω= = 2π f T units: radians/second or s-1 ω (“omega”) is called the angular frequency of the oscillation. The initial phase φ determines where in the motion we set t = 0: x x(t) = A cos (ωt ) t 0 x 0 x(t) = A cos (ωt + 45°) t x x(t) = A cos (ωt− 45°) 0 t Velocity and Acceleration x (t ) = A cos( ω t + ϕ ) dx v (t ) = = − A ω sin( ω t + ϕ ) dt dv a (t ) = = − A ω 2 cos( ω t + ϕ ) = −ω 2 x dt Note : v MAX = A ω a MAX = A ω 2 a(t) =− ω 2 x(t) Velocity and Acceleration x(t) t v(t) t a(t) t Example: SHM can produce very large accelerations if the frequency is high. Engine piston at 4000 rpm, amplitude 5 cm: x = (5.00cm) cosωt ω = 4000× 2π / 60 radians/sec = 419 sec−1 aMAX = 0.05 m × (419 s −1 ) 2 = 8770 m/s2 Example The block is displaced a distance x = 5 cm from its equilibrium position and released from rest at time t = 0. Its motion is SHM with period 2 seconds. Write the function x(t). Steps: 1) Sketch a graph. 2) Write x = A cos (ωt + φ). 3) Keeping an eye on the graph, evaluate A, ω, and φ. M x Example The block is at its equilibrium position and is set in motion by hitting it (and giving it an initial velocity) at time t = 0. Its motion is SHM with amplitude 5 cm and period 2 seconds. Write the function x(t). v0 M x QUIZ The block is at x0 = +5 cm, with positive velocity v0, at time t = 0. Its motion is SHM with amplitude 10 cm and period 2 seconds. If x(t) = A cos (ωt + φ), the phase constant φ should be: A) B) C) D) E) 0o 30o 60o -30o -60o M x0 v0 Quiz B µs=0.5 ω=10 s-1 The amplitude of the oscillation gradually increases until block B starts to slip. At what amplitude A does this happen? a) b) c) d) 1cm 5 cm 50 cm Not known without mB. Summary SHM: x = A cos(ω t + φ ) (get v, a from calculus) Definitions: amplitude, period, frequency, angular frequency, phase, phase constant. The acceleration is proportional to displacement: a(t) = -ω2 x(t)