Title: Periodic Motion
1Chapter 13
2Special Case
- Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)
3Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)
- Only valid for small oscillation amplitude
- But SHM approximates a wide class of periodic
motion, from vibrating atoms to vibrating tuning
forks...
4Starting Model for SHM mass m attached to a
spring
Demonstration
5Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)
- x displacement of mass m from
equilibrium - Choose coordinate x so that x 0 is the
equilibrium position - If we displace the mass m, a restoring force F
acts on m to return it to equilibrium (x0)
6Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)
- By SHM we mean Hookes Law holdsfor small
displacement x (from equilibrium), F
k x ma k x - negative sign F is a restoring force(a and x
have opposite directions)
Demonstration spring with force meter
7(No Transcript)
8What is x(t) for SHM?
- Well explore this using two methods
- The reference circlex(t) projection of
certain circular motion - A little mathSolve Hookes Law
9The Reference Circle
- P mass on spring x(t)
- Q point on reference circle
- P projection of Q onto the screen
10The Reference Circle
- P mass on spring x(t)
- Q point on reference circle
- A amplitude of x(t)
- (motion of P)
- A radius of reference circle (motion of Q)
11The Reference Circle
- P mass on spring x(t)
- Q point on reference circle
- f oscillation frequency of P 1/T
(cycles/sec) - w angular speed of Q 2p /T
(radians/sec) - w 2p f
12What is x(t) for SHM?
- P projection of Q onto screen.
- We conclude the motion of P is
See additional notes or Fig. 13-4 for q
13Alternative A Little Math
- Solve Hookes Law
- Find a basic solution
Solve for x(t)
14See notes on x(t), v(t), a(t)
- v dx/dt v 0 at x A v max
at x 0 - a dv/dta max at x A a 0
at x 0
15Show expression for f
16- going from 1 to 3,increase one of A, m, k
- (a) change A same T
- (b) larger m larger T
- (c) larger k shorter T
Do demonstrations illustrating (a), (b), (c)
17Summary of SHMfor an oscillator of mass m
- A amplitude of motion, f phase angle
- A, f can be found from the values of x and dx/dt
at (say) t 0
18Energy in SHM
- As the body oscillates, E is continuously
transformed from K to U and back again
See notes on vmax
19E K U constant
Do Exercise 13-17
20Summary of SHM
- x displacement from equilibrium (x 0)
- T period of oscillation
- definitions of x and w depend on the SHM
21Different Types of SHM
- horizontal (have been discussing so far)
- vertical (will see acts like horizontal)
- swinging (pendulum)
- twisting (torsion pendulum)
- radial (example atomic vibrations)
22Horizontal SHM
23Horizontal SHM
- Now show a vertical spring acts the same,if we
define x properly.
24Vertical SHM
Show SHM occurs with x defined as shown
Do Exercise 13-25
25Swinging SHM Simple Pendulum
Derive w for small x
Do Pendulum Demonstrations
26Swinging SHM Physical Pendulum
Derive w for small q
Do Exercises 13-39, 13-38
27Angular SHMTorsion Pendulum (fiber-disk)
28Application Cavendish experiment (measures
gravitational constant G). The fiber twists when
blue masses gravitate toward red masses
29Angular SHMTorsion Pendulum (coil-wheel)
Derive w for small q
30Radial SHMAtomic Vibrations
Show SHM results for small x (where r R0x)
31Announcements
- Homework Sets 1 and 2 (Ch. 10 and 11) returned
at front - Homework Set 5 (Ch. 14)available at front, or
on course webpages - Recent changes to classweb accesssee HW 5 sheet
at front, or course webpages
32Damped Simple Harmonic Motion
See transparency on damped block-spring
33SHM Ideal vs. Damped
- Ideal SHM
- We have only treated the restoring force
- Frestoring kx
- More realistic SHM
- We should add some damping force
- Fdamping bv
Demonstration of damped block-spring
34Damping Force
- this is the simplest model
- damping force proportional to velocity
- b damping constant (characterizes
strength of damping)
35SHM Ideal vs. Damped
- In ideal SHM, oscillator energy is constant
E K U , dE/dt
0 - In damped SHM, the oscillators energy decreases
with time E(t) K
U , dE/dt lt 0
36Energy Dissipation in Damped SHM
- Rate of energy loss due to damping
37What is x(t) for damped SHM?
- We get a new equation of motion for x(t)
- We wont solve it, just present the solutions.
38Three Classes of Damping, b
- small (underdamping)
- intermediate (critical damping)
- large (overdamping)
39 underdamped SHM
40underdamped SHMdamped oscillation, frequency
w
41underdamping vs. no damping
- underdamping
- no damping (b0)
42critical dampingdecay to x 0, no oscillation
- can also view this critical value of b as
resulting from oscillation disappearing
See sketch of x(t) for critical damping
43overdamping slower decay to x 0, no
oscillation
See sketch of x(t) for overdamping
44Application
- Shock absorbers
- want critically damped (no oscillations)
- not overdamped(would have aslow response time)
45Forced Oscillations
46Forced SHM
- We have considered the presence of a damping
force acting on an oscillator
Fdamping bv - Now consider applying an external force
Fdriving Fmax coswdt
47Forced SHM
- Every simple harmonic oscillator has a natural
oscillation frequency - (w if undamped, w if underdamped)
- By appling Fdriving Fmax coswdt we force the
oscillator to oscillate at the frequency wd (can
be anything, not necessarily w or w)
48What is x(t) for forced SHM?
- We get a new equation of motion for x(t)
- We wont solve it, just present the solution.
49x(t) for Forced SHM
- If you solve the differential equation, you find
the solution (at late times, t gtgt 2m/b)
50Amplitude A(wd)
- Shown (for f 0)A(wd) for different b
- larger b smaller Amax
- ResonanceAmax occurs at wR, near the natural
frequency,w (k/m)1/2
Do Resonance Demonstrations
51Resonance Frequency (wR)
- Amax occurs at wdwR (where dA/dwd0)
52natural, underdamped, forcedw gt w gt wR
- natural frequency
- underdamped frequency
- resonance frequency
53Introduction toLRC Circuits
- (Electromagnetic Oscillations)
See transparency on LRC circuit
54Electric Quantity Counterpart
- charge Q(t) x(t)
- current I dQ/dt v dx/dt(moving
charge)(generates a magnetic field, B)
55Electrical Concepts
- electric charge Q
- current (moving charge) I dQ/dt
- resistance (Q collides with atoms) R
- voltage (pushes Q through wire) V RI
56Voltage (moves charges)
- resistance R causes charge Q to lose energy
V RI - (voltage potential energy per unit charge)
- C and L also cause energy (voltage) changes
57Circuit Element D(Voltage)
- R resistance VR RI(Q collides with atoms)
- C capacitance VC Q/C(capacity to store Q
on plate) - L inductance VL L(dI/dt)(inertia towards
changes in I)
58Change in Voltage Change in Energy
- voltage potential energy per unit charge
- recall, around a closed loop
59 60Circuit Element Counterpart
- 1/C 1/capacitance k
- L inductance m
- R resistance b
- (Extra Credit Exercise 31-35)
- Use this table to write our damped SHM as damped
electromagnetic oscillations
61In the LRC circuit, Q(t) acts just like
x(t)!underdamped, critically damped, overdamped
62Driven (and resonance) Vdriving Vmax coswdt