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Free and Forced Vibrations

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Free and Forced Vibrations. An Oscillation can be defined by the movement of ... to sound heavy church bells, bell ringers swing them at the resonant frequency ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Free and Forced Vibrations


1
Free and Forced Vibrations
  • An Oscillation can be defined by the movement of
    an object ...
  • Examples of Oscillators are
  • ..
  • The Inertia of an object can be described as
  • Free and Forced Vibrations
  • A Free oscillator is when an ..oscillat
    or is displaced, ( e.g. a pendulum is swung) and
    then . it to , with no..
    acting on it.
  • A forced oscillator is when an ..,
    forcing .. is applied
    to the oscillating object.

2
Forced Oscillators
  • Responses of forced oscillators
  • If vibrations have the frequency as
    the of the object, the of
    the oscillations will ..rapidly. This Is
    called ...
  • At resonance the driver has to apply the .
    force (.), to the oscillator at a
    rate, in order to .. the
    amplitude of the object, this is why
    the amplitude increases and there is no ..
  • Therefore the rate of supply of .. is
    .. . to the rate of of ., as
    work is done against forces.

3
Uses of Resonance
  • In order to sound heavy church bells, bell
    ringers swing them at the resonant frequency of
    the bell in its carriage.
  • Resonance of strings at their .. ..
    and multiples of them give us musical sounds.
  • Wind instruments are sounded by making a
    .. of air resonate by either blowing a
    whistle at one end.
  • Resonance of makes radio waves and
    allows them to be received.

4
Graph!
  • By plotting a graph of amplitude against
    frequency, there is a large peak, occurring at
    the . (..).

5
Limitations of Resonance
  • Sometimes when there is no force to stop this
    effect, the oscillator may, if it
    continues ...
  • If the frequency . to the object does not
    to the of the object,
    then the oscillation is
  • The of the resonant . may be limited
    by . forces.
  • thus increasing the , .. the
    sharpness and of the resonance.
  • So .resonance in and machinery is
    can be .. damping .
  • If an object oscillates at the
    of another, then the .. object may start to
    . .

6
Dangers of Resonance
  • Panels in a bus rattling.
  • Resonance in car suspensions needs to be damped.
    The shock absorbers must be working properly, or
    the car will go out of control.
  • Suspension bridges can start rocking in the wind
    at their resonant frequency, and the oscillations
    can get so large that the deck can collapse into
    the sea.

7
Questions to Do !
  • A rope hanging from a tree swings with a period
    of 5 s. What is its frequency?


    .
  • What is the difference between natural and forced
    oscillations?

    ..
    ..
  • At a certain engine speed, a cars wing mirror
    starts to vibrate strongly. Why does this
    happen?



    .
  • Explain why worn shock absorbers can make a car
    fail its annual MOT (an annual check in which
    about 30 safety items are checked. It is illegal
    to drive a car without a current MOT).






    .
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