1 / 9

Harmonic Oscillator

Harmonic Oscillator. Hooke’s Law. The Newtonian form of the spring force is Hooke’s Law. Restoring force Linear with displacement. The Lagrangian form uses the potential energy. L. L+ x. L - x. The spring force has a potential energy V = ½ kx 2 . Minimum energy at equilibrium.

leora
Download Presentation

Harmonic Oscillator

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Harmonic Oscillator

  2. Hooke’s Law • The Newtonian form of the spring force is Hooke’s Law. • Restoring force • Linear with displacement. • The Lagrangian form uses the potential energy. L L+ x L - x

  3. The spring force has a potential energy V = ½ kx2. Minimum energy at equilibrium. No velocity, K = ½ mv2 = 0 A higher energy has two turning points. Corresponds to K = 0 In between K > 0 Motion forbidden outside range Energy Curve V E E0 x1 x0 x2 x

  4. Potential Well • An arbitrary potential near equilibrium can be approximated with a spring potential. • Second order series expansion • First derivative is zero V E0 x x0

  5. Stability • For positive k, the motion is like a spring. • Stable oscillations about a point • For negative k, the motion is unstable. V E0 x xS xU unstable

  6. The differential equation at stable equilibrium has a complex solution. Euler’s formula Real part is physical Complex Solutions Im r ir sin q q Re r cos q Complex conjugate for real solution

  7. Small damping forces are velocity dependent. Not from a potential Generalized force on right side The differential equation can be solved with an exponential. Possibly complex Quadratic expression must vanish Damping Force

  8. The quadratic equation in l has three forms depending on the constants. If g > w0, W is real. Overdamped solution If g = w0, W is zero. Critically damped solution If g > w0, W is imaginary. Underdamped solution Three Cases

  9. The energy in a damped oscillator is dissipated. Work done by friction Lightly damped systems have periods close to undamped. Damping g<< w0 Quality factor Q measures energy loss per radian. Quality Factor next

More Related