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PHYS16 – Lecture 36 Ch. 15 Oscillations Xkcd.com

PHYS16 – Lecture 36

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PHYS16 – Lecture 36. Ch. 15 Oscillations. Xkcd.com. Oscillations pre-question. A mass on a spring is driven at a driving frequency (red curve) and the resulting position vs. time of the mass is given (blue curve). Which case is closest to resonance? . Outline for Oscillations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Ch. 15 Oscillations

Xkcd.com

Page 2: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Oscillations pre-question

• A mass on a spring is driven at a driving frequency (red curve) and the resulting position vs. time of the mass is given (blue curve). Which case is closest to resonance?

Page 3: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Outline for Oscillations

• Simple Harmonic Motion– Position, Velocity, Acceleration– Force– Energy

• Resonance and Damping

Page 4: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Simple Harmonic Motion – Cheat Sheet

• Position, Velocity, and Acceleration

• Restoring Force gives ang. freq. dependence

AvfT

t(-AωatAωvtAx

max

2

,22)sin ,)cos( ),sin(

mkxkxF ,

dtdm 2

2

Page 5: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Simple Harmonic Motion:Restoring Force

Page 6: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Example Question• What is the period of a pendulum?

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/a8/Pendulum.png/300px-Pendulum.png

Where is the restoring force the greatest? Where istension the greatest? Restoring force – At top of swing!

Tension – At bottom of swing

gLT 2

Page 7: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Simple Harmonic Motion:Energy

Page 8: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Energy in SHM

2

22222

22

21

)(cos21)(sin

21

21

21

kAE

tAktAmE

kxmvE

http://www.farraguttn.com/science/milligan/APPhys/SHMOver_files/image022.jpg

Page 9: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Example Question

• A 0.5-kg mass hits a spring with a velocity of 2 m/s and sticks wikthout energy loss. The spring starts in its equilibrium position and has a spring constant of 0.5 N/m. What is the amplitude of the oscillation?

A = 2 m

Page 10: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Simple Harmonic Motion:Damping and Resonance

Page 11: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Damping

• Damping – when a force (friction, air drag) causes the oscillator to lose energy

A

mbtmbt AexmbtAex 2/

max2

2200

2/ ,4

),sin(

bvF

http://beltoforion.de/pendulum_revisited/Damped_oscillation_graph2.png

Page 12: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Resonance

• Resonance – when a driving force has the same frequency of oscillation as the oscillator

0ffdrive

Page 13: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Discussion: Resonance vs. Damping

• When would you want to have resonance or damping? When would resonance or damping be unwanted?

Damping – when you don’t want oscillations: buildings, bridgesResonance – when you want to have oscillations: pushing a kid on a swing, making standing waves in cavity

Page 14: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Oscillations pre-question

• Is a bouncing ball an example of simple harmonic motion?

A) YesB) No

Page 15: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Oscillations pre-question

• Two kids are swinging on two swings of the same height – one kid is a little chubbier than the other. Neglecting frictional forces, which kid completes a back and forth swing in the fastest time?

A) The chubby kidB) The skinny kidC) The kid who pushes off the ground the bestD) Both complete in the same time

Page 16: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Oscillations pre-question

• A mass on a spring is driven at a driving frequency (red curve) and the resulting position vs. time of the mass is given (blue curve). Which case is closest to resonance?

Page 17: PHYS16 – Lecture 36

Main Points - SHM

• Movement is dependent upon amplitude, period and phase

• Restoring Force creates oscillation

• Energy is dependent on amplitude

• Damping decreases A, Resonance increases A

)2sin( 0 t

TAx

kxF

2

21 kAE