Title: Goals:
1Lecture 20
- Chapter 14
- Compare and contrast different systems with SHM.
- Understand energy conservation (transfer) in SHM.
- Understand the basic ideas of damping and
resonance. - Chapter 15
- Understand pressure in liquids and gases
- Use Archimedes principle to understand buoyancy
- Understand the equation of continuity
- Use an ideal-fluid model to study fluid flow.
- Investigate the elastic deformation of solids
and liquids
- Assignment
- HW9, Due Wednesday, Apr. 7th
- Tuesday (after break!!!) Read all of Chapter 15
2SHM So Far
- The most general solution is x A cos(?t ?)
- where A amplitude
- ? (angular) frequency
- ? phase constant
- For SHM without friction,
- The frequency does not depend on the amplitude !
- This is true of all simple harmonic motion!
- The oscillation occurs around the equilibrium
point where the force is zero! - Energy is a constant, it transfers between
potential and kinetic
3The Simple Pendulum
- A pendulum is made by suspending a mass m at the
end of a string of length L. Find the frequency
of oscillation for small displacements. - S Fy may T mg cos(q) mac m vT2/L
- S Fx max -mg sin(q)
- where x L tan q
- If q small then x ? L q and sin(q) ? q
- 0 tan 0.00 sin 0.00 0.00
- 5 tan 0.09 sin 0.09 0.09
- 10 tan 0.17 sin 0.17 0.17
- 15 tan 0.26 0.27
- sin 0.26 0.26
4The Simple Pendulum
- A pendulum is made by suspending a mass m at the
end of a string of length L. Find the frequency
of oscillation for small displacements. - S Fy may T mg cos(q) mac m vT2/L
- S Fx max -mg sin(q)
- where x L tan q
- If q small then x ? L q and sin(q) ? q
- dx/dt L dq/dt
- ax d2x/dt2 L d2q/dt2
- so ax -g q L d2q / dt2 ? L d2q / dt2 g q
0 - and q q0 cos(wt f) or q q0 sin(wt
f) - with w (g/L)½
5SHM So Far
- The most general solution is x(t) A cos(?t ?)
-
- where A amplitude
- ? (angular) frequency 2p f 2p/T
- ? phase constant
Velocity v(t) -?A sin(?t ?) Acceleration
a(t) -?2A cos(?t ?)
Spring constant Inertia
Hookes Law Spring
Simple Pendulum
6SHM So Far
- For SHM without friction
- The frequency does not depend on the amplitude !
- The oscillation occurs around the equilibrium
point where the force is zero! - Mechanical Energy is constant, it transfers
between potential and kinetic energies.
7The shaker cart
- You stand inside a small cart attached to a
heavy-duty spring, the spring is compressed and
released, and you shake back and forth,
attempting to maintain your balance. Note that
there is also a sandbag in the cart with you. - At the instant you pass through the equilibrium
position of the spring, you drop the sandbag out
of the cart onto the ground. - What effect does jettisoning the sandbag at the
equilibrium position have on the amplitude of
your oscillation? - It increases the amplitude.
- It decreases the amplitude.
- It has no effect on the amplitude.
8The shaker cart
- Instead of dropping the sandbag as you pass
through equilibrium, you decide to drop the
sandbag when the cart is at its maximum distance
from equilibrium. - What effect does jettisoning the sandbag at the
carts maximum distance from equilibrium have on
the amplitude of your oscillation? - It increases the amplitude.
- It decreases the amplitude.
- It has no effect on the amplitude.
9The shaker cart
- What effect does jettisoning the sandbag at the
carts maximum distance from equilibrium have on
the maximum speed of the cart? - It increases the maximum speed.
- It decreases the maximum speed.
- It has no effect on the maximum speed.
10What about Vertical Springs?
- For a vertical spring, if y is measured from the
equilibrium position -
- Recall force of the spring is the negative
derivative of this function - This will be just like the horizontal case-ky
ma
j
k
y 0
F -ky
m
Which has solution y(t) A cos( ?t ?)
where
11 Exercise Simple Harmonic Motion
- A mass oscillates up down on a spring. Its
position as a function of time is shown below.
At which of the points shown does the mass have
positive velocity and negative acceleration ? - Remember velocity is slope and acceleration is
the curvature
y(t) A cos( ?t ?) v(t) -A ? sin( ?t ?)
a(t) -A ?2 cos( ?t ?)
12Home Exercise
- A mass m 2 kg on a spring oscillates (no
friction) with amplitude A 10 cm. At t 0
its speed is at a maximum, and is v2 m/s - What is the angular frequency of oscillation ? ?
- What is the spring constant k ?
- General relationships E K U constant, w
(k/m)½ - So at maximum speed U0 and ½ mv2 E ½ kA2
- thus k mv2/A2 2 x (2) 2/(0.1)2 800 N/m, w
20 rad / sec
13Home Exercise Initial Conditions
- A mass hanging from a vertical spring is lifted a
distance d above equilibrium and released at t
0. - Which of the following describe its velocity and
acceleration as a function of time (upwards is
positive y direction)?
(A) v(t) - vmax sin( wt ) a(t) -amax
cos( wt )
k
y
(B) v(t) vmax sin( wt ) a(t) amax
cos( wt )
d
t 0
(C) v(t) vmax cos( wt ) a(t) -amax
cos(wt )
0
(both vmax and amax are positive numbers)
14Home Exercise Initial Conditions
- A mass hanging from a vertical spring is lifted a
distance d above equilibrium and released at t
0. Which of the following describe its velocity
and acceleration as a function of time (upwards
is positive y direction)
(A) v(t) - vmax sin( wt ) a(t) -amax
cos( wt )
k
y
(B) v(t) vmax sin( wt ) a(t) amax
cos( wt )
d
t 0
(C) v(t) vmax cos( wt ) a(t) -amax
cos(wt )
0
(both vmax and amax are positive numbers)
15The Torsional Pendulum
- A pendulum is made by suspending a mass m at the
end of a string of length L. Find the frequency
of oscillation for small displacements. - S tz Iaz -mg sin(q) L
- S tz mL2az -mg q L
- L (d2q /dt2) -g q
- d2q /dt2 (-g/L) q
- with q(t) q0 sin wt or q0 cos wt
- and w (g/L)½
- or if a true horizontal torsional pendulum
- Iaz -k q with w (k/I)½
16Exercise Simple Harmonic Motion
- You are sitting on a swing. A friend gives you a
small push and you start swinging back forth
with period T1. - Suppose you were standing on the swing rather
than sitting. When given a small push you start
swinging back forth with period T2. - Which of the following is true recalling that w
(g / L)½
(A) T1 T2 (B) T1 gt T2 (C) T1 lt T2
17Energy in SHM
- For both the spring and the pendulum, we can
derive the SHM solution using energy
conservation. - The total energy (K U) of a system undergoing
SMH will always be constant! - This is not surprising since there are only
conservative forces present, hence energy is
conserved.
18SHM and quadratic potentials
- SHM will occur whenever the potential is
quadratic. - For small oscillations this will be true
- For example, the potential betweenH atoms in an
H2 molecule lookssomething like this
U
x
19SHM and quadratic potentials
- Curvature reflects the spring constant
- or modulus (i.e., stress vs. strain or
- force vs. displacement)
- Measuring modular proteins with an AFM
See http//hansmalab.physics.ucsb.edu
20What about Friction?A velocity dependent drag
force (A model)
We can guess at a new solution.
and now w02 k / m
Note
With,
21What about Friction?
A damped exponential
if
22Variations in the damping
Small damping time constant (m/b) Low friction
coefficient, b ltlt 2m Moderate damping time
constant (m/b) Moderate friction coefficient (b lt
2m)
23Damped Simple Harmonic Motion
- A downward shift in the angular frequency
- There are three mathematically distinct regimes
underdamped
critically damped
overdamped
24Driven SHM with Resistance
- Apply a sinusoidal force, F0 cos (wt), and now
consider what A and b do,
Not Zero!!!
b/m small
steady state amplitude
b/m middling
b large
w
?
w ? w0
25Resonance-based DNA detection with nanoparticle
probes
Change the mass of the cantilever change the
resonant frequency Su et al., APL 82 3562
(2003)
26Exercise Resonant Motion
- Consider the following set of pendulums all
attached to the same string
B
A
D
C
If I start bob D swinging which of the others
will have the largest swing amplitude
? (A) (B) (C)
27Chapter 15, Fluids
- This is an actual photo of an iceberg, taken by a
rig manager for Global Marine Drilling in St.
Johns, Newfoundland. The water was calm and the
sun was almost directly overhead so that the diver
28Fluids (Ch. 15)
- At ordinary temperature, matter exists in one of
three states - Solid - has a shape and forms a surface
- Liquid - has no shape but forms a surface
- Gas - has no shape and forms no surface
- What do we mean by fluids?
- Fluids are substances that flow. substances
that take the shape of the container - Atoms and molecules are free to move.
- No long range correlation between positions.
29Fluids
- An intrinsic parameter of a fluid
- Density
units kg/m3 10-3 g/cm3
r(water) 1.000 x 103 kg/m3 1.000
g/cm3 r(ice) 0.917 x 103 kg/m3
0.917 g/cm3 r(air) 1.29 kg/m3
1.29 x 10-3 g/cm3 r(Hg) 13.6
x103 kg/m3 13.6 g/cm3
30Fluids
- Another parameter Pressure
- Any force exerted by a fluid is perpendicular to
a surface of contact, and is proportional to the
area of that surface. - Force (a vector) in a fluid can be expressed in
terms of pressure (a scalar) as
31What is the SI unit of pressure?
- Pascal
- Atmosphere
- Bernoulli
- Young
- p.s.i.
Units 1 N/m2 1 Pa
(Pascal) 1 bar 105 Pa 1 mbar 102 Pa 1
torr 133.3 Pa
1 atm 1.013 x105 Pa 1013 mbar
760 Torr 14.7 lb/ in2 (PSI)
32Pressure vs. Depth
- For a uniform fluid in an open container
pressure same at a given depth independent of the
container
- Fluid level is the same everywhere in a connected
container, assuming no surface forces - Why is this so? Why does the pressure below the
surface depend only on depth if it is in
equilibrium?
- Imagine a tube that would connect two regions at
the same depth.
- If the pressures were different, fluid would
flow in the tube!
33Lecture 20
- Assignment
- HW9, Due Wednesday, Apr. 7th
- Tuesday Read all of Chapter 15