Harmonic oscillator Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
A harmonic oscillator is a mechanical system in which there exists a returning force F directly proportionate to the displacement x, i.e.
If F is the only force acting on the mechanical system, the system is called a simple harmonic oscillator. The motion of a simple harmonic oscillator, called simple harmonic motion, is essentially a sine function oscillating about the equilibrium displacement, x = 0, at which the returning force is zero.
The potential energy V associated with such a returning force is called a harmonic potential. It has the form
Most harmonic oscillators, at least approximately, solve the differential equation:
Full mathematical definition
where t is time, b is the damping constant, ωo is the characteristic angular frequency, and Aocos(ωt) represents something driving the system with amplitude Ao and angular frequency ω. x is the measurement that is oscillating; it can be position, current, or nearly anything else. The angular frequency is related to the frequency, f, by:
Important terms
- Amplitude: maximal displacement from the equilibrium.
- Period: the time it takes the system to complete an oscillation cycle.
- Frequency: the number of cycles the system performs per unit time (usually measured in hertz = 1/s).
- Angular frequency:
- Phase: how much of a cycle the system completed (system that begins is in phase zero, system which completed half a cycle is in phase ).
- Initial conditions: the state of the system at t = 0, the beginning of oscillations.
Simple harmonic oscillator
A simple harmonic oscillator is simply an oscillator that is neither damped nor driven. So the equation to describe one is:
In the case of a mass hanging on a spring, Newton's Laws, combined with Hooke's law for the behavior of a spring, states that:
AC LC circuit.
a few notes about what the response of the circuit to different AC frequencies.
weighted spring underwater
Note well:
underdamped, critically damped
The steady state solution is
Driven harmonic oscillator
Satisfies equation:
Good example:Damped harmonic oscillator
Satisfies equation:
good example:Damped, driven harmonic oscillator
equation:
The general solution is a sum of a transient (the solution for damped undriven harmonic oscillator, homogenous ODE) that depends on initial conditions, and a steady state (particular solution of the unhomogenous ODE) that is independent of initial conditions and depends only on driving frequency, driving force, restoring force, damping force, and inertial moment of the oscillator.
where
is the absolute value of the impedance
and
is the phase of the oscillation relative to the driving force.
One might see that for a certain driving frequency, , the amplitude (relative to a given ) is maximal. This occurs for the frequency
In summary: at steady state the frequency of oscillation is the same as the driving force, but the oscillation is phase offset and scaled by amounts that depend on the frequency of the driving force in relation to the preferred (resonant) frequency of the oscillating system.
example:
Notes for above apply, transient vs steady state response, and quality factor.
A final note on mathematics
For a more complete description of how to solve the above equation, see the article on differential equations.
