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* Describe a simple harmonic oscillator.
* Explain the link between simple harmonic motion and waves.
The oscillations of a system in which the net force can be described by Hooke’s
law are of special importance, because they are very common. They are also the
simplest oscillatory systems. Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM) is the name given
to oscillatory motion for a system where the net force can be described by
Hooke’s law, and such a system is called a simple harmonic oscillator. If
the net force can be described by Hooke’s law and there is no damping (by
friction or other non-conservative forces), then a simple harmonic oscillator
will oscillate with equal displacement on either side of the equilibrium
position, as shown for an object on a spring in [Figure 1]. The
maximum displacement from equilibrium is called the amplitude$$X $$ . The
units for amplitude and displacement are the same, but depend on the type of
oscillation. For the object on the spring, the units of amplitude and
displacement are meters; whereas for sound oscillations, they have units of
pressure (and other types of oscillations have yet other units). Because
amplitude is the maximum displacement, it is related to the energy in the
oscillation.
Take-Home Experiment: SHM and the Marble
Find a bowl or basin that is shaped like a hemisphere on the inside. Place a marble inside the bowl and tilt the bowl periodically so the marble rolls from the bottom of the bowl to equally high points on the sides of the bowl. Get a feel for the force required to maintain this periodic motion. What is the restoring force and what role does the force you apply play in the simple harmonic motion (SHM) of the marble?
{: #Figure1}
What is so significant about simple harmonic motion? One special thing is that
the period $$T $$ and frequency $$f $$ of a simple harmonic oscillator are
independent of amplitude. The string of a guitar, for example, will oscillate
with the same frequency whether plucked gently or hard. Because the period is
constant, a simple harmonic oscillator can be used as a clock.
Two important factors do affect the period of a simple harmonic oscillator. The
period is related to how stiff the system is. A very stiff object has a large
force constant $$k $$ , which causes the system to have a smaller period. For
example, you can adjust a diving board’s stiffness—the stiffer it is, the faster
it vibrates, and the shorter its period. Period also depends on the mass of the
oscillating system. The more massive the system is, the longer the period. For
example, a heavy person on a diving board bounces up and down more slowly than a
light one.
In fact, the mass $$m $$ and the force constant $$k $$ are the only factors
that affect the period and frequency of simple harmonic motion.
Period of Simple Harmonic Oscillator
The *period of a simple harmonic oscillator* is given by
$$T=2\pi \sqrt{\frac{m}{k}} $$
and, because $$f=1/T $$ ,
the *frequency of a simple harmonic oscillator* is
$$f=\frac{1}{2\pi }\sqrt{\frac{k}{m}}. $$
Note that neither $$T $$ nor $$f $$ has any dependence on amplitude.
Take-Home Experiment: Mass and Ruler Oscillations
Find two identical wooden or plastic rulers. Tape one end of each ruler firmly to the edge of a table so that the length of each ruler that protrudes from the table is the same. On the free end of one ruler tape a heavy object such as a few large coins. Pluck the ends of the rulers at the same time and observe which one undergoes more cycles in a time period, and measure the period of oscillation of each of the rulers.
Calculate the Frequency and Period of Oscillations: Bad Shock Absorbers in a Car
If the shock absorbers in a car go bad, then the car will oscillate at the least provocation, such as when going over bumps in the road and after stopping (See [[Figure 2]](#Figure2)). Calculate the frequency and period of these oscillations for such a car if the car’s mass (including its load) is 900 kg and the force constant ( $$k $$ ) of the suspension system is $$ 6.53 \times 10^{4} \text{N/m} $$.
Strategy
The frequency of the car’s oscillations will be that of a simple harmonic
oscillator as given in the equation $$f=\frac{1}{2\pi }\sqrt{\frac{k}{m}} $$ .
The mass and the force constant are both given.
You could use $$T=2\pi \sqrt{\frac{m}{k}} $$ to calculate the period, but it
is simpler to use the relationship $$T=1/f $$ and substitute the value just
found for $$f $$ :
The values of $$T $$ and $$f $$ both seem about right for a bouncing car. You
can observe these oscillations if you push down hard on the end of a car and let
go.
The Link between Simple Harmonic Motion and Waves
If a time-exposure photograph of the bouncing car were taken as it drove by, the
headlight would make a wavelike streak, as shown in [Figure 2].
Similarly, [Figure 3] shows an object bouncing on a spring as it
leaves a wavelike trace of its position on a moving strip of paper. Both waves
are sine functions. All simple harmonic motion is intimately related to sine and
cosine waves.
{: #Figure2}
{: #Figure3}
The displacement as a function of time t in any simple harmonic motion—that
is, one in which the net restoring force can be described by Hooke’s law, is
given by
$$x\left(t\right)=X \cos\frac{2 \pi t}{T}, $$
where $$X $$ is amplitude. At $$t=0 $$ , the initial position is $${x}_{0}=X $$
, and the displacement oscillates back and forth with a period $$T $$.
(When $$t=T $$ , we get $$x=X $$ again because $$\cos 2\pi =1 $$ .)
Furthermore, from this expression for $$x $$ , the velocity $$v $$ as a function
of time is given by:
where $${v}_{\text{max}}=2\pi X/T=X\sqrt{k/m} $$ . The object has zero velocity
at maximum displacement—for example, $$v=0 $$ when $$t=0 $$ , and at that time
$$x=X $$ . The minus sign in the first equation for $$v\left(t\right) $$ gives
the correct direction for the velocity. Just after the start of the motion, for
instance, the velocity is negative because the system is moving back toward the
equilibrium point. Finally, we can get an expression for acceleration using
Newton’s second law. [Then we have $$x\left(t\right), v\left(t\right), t, $$
and $$a\left(t\right) $$ , the quantities needed for kinematics and a
description of simple harmonic motion.] According to Newton’s second law, the
acceleration is $$a=F/m=kx/m $$. So, $$a\left(t\right) $$ is also a cosine
function:
Hence, $$a\left(t\right) $$ is directly proportional to and in the opposite
direction to $$x\left(t\right) $$.
[Figure 4] shows the simple harmonic motion of an object on a spring and
presents graphs of $$x\left(t\right),v\left(t\right), $$ and $$a\left(t\right)
$$ versus time.
{: #Figure4 height="575"}
The most important point here is that these equations are mathematically
straightforward and are valid for all simple harmonic motion. They are very
useful in visualizing waves associated with simple harmonic motion, including
visualizing how waves add with one another.
Check Your Understanding
Suppose you pluck a banjo string. You hear a single note that starts out loud and slowly quiets over time. Describe what happens to the sound waves in terms of period, frequency and amplitude as the sound decreases in volume.
Frequency and period remain essentially unchanged. Only amplitude decreases as volume decreases.
Check Your Understanding
A babysitter is pushing a child on a swing. At the point where the swing reaches $$x $$ ,
where would the corresponding point on a wave of this motion be located?
$$x $$
is the maximum deformation, which corresponds to the amplitude of the wave. The point on the wave would either be at the very top or the very bottom of the curve.
PhET Explorations: Masses and Springs
A realistic mass and spring laboratory. Hang masses from springs and adjust the spring stiffness and damping. You can even slow time. Transport the lab to different planets. A chart shows the kinetic, potential, and thermal energy for each spring.
{: class="newline"}
Simple harmonic motion is oscillatory motion for a system that can be
described only by Hooke’s law. Such a system is also called a simple harmonic
oscillator.
Maximum displacement is the amplitude $$X $$. The period $$T $$ and frequency
$$f $$ of a simple harmonic oscillator are given by $$T=2\pi
\sqrt{\frac{m}{k}} $$ and $$f=\frac{1}{2\pi }\sqrt{\frac{k}{m}} $$ , where $$m
$$ is the mass of the system.
Displacement in simple harmonic motion as a function of time is given by
$$x\left(t\right)=X \cos \frac{2\pi t}{T}. $$
The velocity is given by $$v\left(t\right)=-{v}{\text{max}}\sin\frac{2\pi
t}{T} $$ , where $${v}{\text{max}}=\sqrt{k/m}X $$ .
The acceleration is found to be $$a\left(t\right)=-\frac{kX}{m} \cos
\frac{2\pi t}{T}. $$
Conceptual Questions
What conditions must be met to produce simple harmonic motion?
(a) If frequency is not constant for some oscillation, can the oscillation be simple harmonic motion?
(b) Can you think of any examples of harmonic motion where the frequency may
depend on the amplitude?
Give an example of a simple harmonic oscillator, specifically noting how its frequency is independent of amplitude.
Explain why you expect an object made of a stiff material to vibrate at a higher frequency than a similar object made of a spongy material.
As you pass a freight truck with a trailer on a highway, you notice that its trailer is bouncing up and down slowly. Is it more likely that the trailer is heavily loaded or nearly empty? Explain your answer.
Some people modify cars to be much closer to the ground than when manufactured. Should they install stiffer springs? Explain your answer.
Problems & Exercises
A type of cuckoo clock keeps time by having a mass bouncing on a spring, usually something cute like a cherub in a chair. What force constant is needed to produce a period of 0.500 s for a 0.0150-kg mass?
$$ 2.37 \text{N/m} $$
If the spring constant of a simple harmonic oscillator is doubled, by what factor will the mass of the system need to change in order for the frequency of the motion to remain the same?
A 0.500-kg mass suspended from a spring oscillates with a period of 1.50 s. How much mass must be added to the object to change the period to 2.00 s?
0.389 kg
By how much leeway (both percentage and mass) would you have in the selection of the mass of the object in the previous problem if you did not wish the new period to be greater than 2.01 s or less than 1.99 s?
Suppose you attach the object with mass $$m $$
to a vertical spring originally at rest, and let it bounce up and down. You release the object from rest at the spring’s original rest length. (a) Show that the spring exerts an upward force of $$2.00 \mathrm{mg} $$
on the object at its lowest point. (b) If the spring has a force constant of $$ 10.0 \text{N/m} $$
and a 0.25-kg-mass object is set in motion as described, find the amplitude of the oscillations. (c) Find the maximum velocity.
A diver on a diving board is undergoing simple harmonic motion. Her mass is 55.0 kg and the period of her motion is 0.800 s. The next diver is a male whose period of simple harmonic oscillation is 1.05 s. What is his mass if the mass of the board is negligible?
94.7 kg
Suppose a diving board with no one on it bounces up and down in a simple harmonic motion with a frequency of 4.00 Hz. The board has an effective mass of 10.0 kg. What is the frequency of the simple harmonic motion of a 75.0-kg diver on the board?
![The figure shows a little kid, about ten to twelve months old, standing in a toy jolly jumper, which is tied to the ceiling hook by its four spring belts.](../resources/Figure_16_03_05.jpg "This child’s toy relies on springs to keep infants entertained. (credit: By Humboldthead, Flickr)"){: #Figure5}
The device pictured in [Figure 5] entertains infants while keeping
them from wandering. The child bounces in a harness suspended from a door frame
by a spring.
(a) If the spring stretches 0.250 m while supporting an 8.0-kg child, what is
its spring constant?
(b) What is the time for one complete bounce of this child? (c) What is the
child’s maximum velocity if the amplitude of her bounce is 0.200 m?
A 90.0-kg skydiver hanging from a parachute bounces up and down with a period of 1.50 s. What is the new period of oscillation when a second skydiver, whose mass is 60.0 kg, hangs from the legs of the first, as seen in [[Figure 6]](#Figure6).
{: #Figure6}
1.94 s
### Glossary
{: class="glossary-title"}
amplitude
: the maximum displacement from the equilibrium position of an object
oscillating around the equilibrium position
simple harmonic motion
: the oscillatory motion in a system where the net force can be described by
Hooke’s law
simple harmonic oscillator
: a device that implements Hooke’s law, such as a mass that is attached to a
spring, with the other end of the spring being connected to a rigid support such
as a wall