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More Oscillations Physics 202 Professor Vogel (Professor Carkner’s notes, ed) Lecture 3.

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Presentation on theme: "More Oscillations Physics 202 Professor Vogel (Professor Carkner’s notes, ed) Lecture 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 More Oscillations Physics 202 Professor Vogel (Professor Carkner’s notes, ed) Lecture 3

2 Amplitude, Period and Phase

3 Phase  The phase of SHM is the quantity in parentheses, i.e. cos( phase )  The difference in phase between 2 SHM curves indicates how far out of phase the motion is  The difference/2  is the offset as a fraction of one period  Example: SHO’s  =  &  =0 are offset 1/2 period  They are phase shifted by 1/2 period

4 SHM and Energy A linear oscillator has a total energy E, which is the sum of the potential and kinetic energies (E=U+K) U and K change as the mass oscillates As one increases the other decreases Energy must be conserved

5 SHM Energy Conservation

6 Potential Energy Potential energy is the integral of force From our expression for x U=½kx m 2 cos 2 (  t+  )

7 Kinetic Energy Kinetic energy depends on the velocity, K=½mv 2 = ½m  2 x m 2 sin 2 (  t+  ) Since  2 =k/m, K = ½kx m 2 sin 2 (  t+  ) The total energy E=U+K which will give: E= ½kx m 2

8 Pendulums  A mass suspended from a string and set swinging will oscillate with SHM  We will first consider a simple pendulum where all the mass is concentrated in the mass at the end of the string  Consider a simple pendulum of mass m and length L displaced an angle  from the vertical, which moves it a linear distance s from the equilibrium point

9 The Period of a Pendulum  The the restoring force is: F = -mg sin   For small angles sin   We can replace  with s/L F=-(mg/L)s  Compare to Hooke’s law F=-kx  k for a pendulum is (mg/L)  Period for SHM is T = 2  (m/k) ½ T=2  (L/g) ½

10 Pendulum and Gravity  The period of a pendulum depends only on the length and g, not on mass  A heavier mass requires more force to move, but is acted on by a larger gravitational force  A pendulum is a common method of finding the local value of g  Friction and air resistance need to be taken into account

11 Pendulum Clocks  Since a pendulum has a regular period it can be used to move a clock hand  Consider a clock second hand attached to a gear  The gear is attached to weights that try to turn it  The gear is stopped by a toothed mechanism attached to a pendulum of period = 2 seconds  The mechanism disengages when the pendulum is in the equilibrium position and so allows the second hand to move twice per cycle  Since the period is 2 seconds the second hand advances once per second

12 Physical Pendulum  Real pendulums do not have all of their mass at one point  Properties of a physical pendulum depend on its moment of inertia (I) and the distance between the pivot point and the center of mass (h), specifically: T=2  (I/mgh) ½

13 Non-Simple Pendulum

14 Uniform Circular Motion  Simple harmonic motion is uniform circular motion seen edge on  Consider a particle moving in a circle with the origin at the center  Viewed edge-on the particle seems to be moving back and forth between 2 extremes around the origin  The projection of the displacement, velocity and acceleration onto the edge-on circle are described by the SMH equations

15 Uniform Circular Motion and SHM x-axis y-axis xmxm angle =  t+  Particle moving in circle of radius x m viewed edge-on: cos (  t+  )=x/x m x=x m cos (  t+  ) x(t)=x m cos (  t+  ) Particle at time t

16 Observing the Moons of Jupiter  Galileo was the first person to observe the sky with a telescope in a serious way  He discovered the 4 inner moons of Jupiter  Today known as the Galilean moons  He (and we) saw the orbit edge-on

17 Jupiter and Moons

18 Apparent Motion of Callisto


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