AP Physics 1 Unit 7 Oscillations: Understanding SHM Through Representations and Energy

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25 Terms

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Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)

Oscillatory motion in which the acceleration (and net force) is proportional to displacement from equilibrium and opposite in direction.

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Restoring force

A force that points toward equilibrium and tends to return an object to its equilibrium position.

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SHM defining equation

The condition for SHM: a=ω2xa = -\omega^2 x (acceleration is proportional to displacement and opposite in direction).

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Hooke’s Law

Spring restoring-force relationship: F = −kx, where k is the spring constant and x is displacement from equilibrium.

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Spring constant (k)

A measure of a spring’s stiffness (units N/m) in Hooke’s law F=kxF = -kx.

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Angular frequency (ω)

A measure of how fast an oscillator cycles, in radians per second; for a mass-spring system θ=km\theta = \frac{\sqrt{k}}{m}.

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Equilibrium position

The position where net force is zero (often x = 0 in SHM).

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Amplitude (A)

The maximum displacement from equilibrium in an oscillation.

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Period (T)

The time required for one complete cycle of oscillation.

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Frequency (f)

The number of cycles per second; f=1Tf = \frac{1}{T}.

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Angular frequency relations

Connections among period and frequency: ω = 2πf = 2π/T.

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Mass–spring period

For an ideal mass–spring oscillator: T = 2π√(m/k), independent of amplitude A.

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Small-angle pendulum period

For a simple pendulum at small angles: T=2θπ√LgT = 2\theta \text{π√}\frac{L}{g}, where L is length and g is gravitational field strength.

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Small-angle approximation

For small angles (in radians), sinθ ≈ θ, allowing pendulum motion to be modeled as SHM.

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Effective spring constant of a small-angle pendulum (k_eff)

For small oscillations, the pendulum’s tangential restoring force can be written like Hooke’s law with keff=mgLk_{eff} = \frac{mg}{L}.

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Sinusoidal position model

Standard SHM position function: x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ).

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Phase constant (φ)

A constant that sets the oscillator’s starting point in the cycle at t = 0 (horizontal shift of the sinusoid).

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SHM velocity function

For x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ), the velocity is v(t) = −Aω sin(ωt + φ).

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SHM acceleration function

For x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ), the acceleration is a(t) = −Aω² cos(ωt + φ).

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Maximum speed in SHM (v_max)

The greatest speed occurs at equilibrium: vmax=A×θv_{max} = A \times \theta.

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Maximum acceleration magnitude in SHM (a_max)

Acceleration magnitude is greatest at the endpoints: amax=A×θ2a_{max} = A \times \theta^2.

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a vs. x “fingerprint” of SHM

In SHM, an acceleration–displacement graph is a straight line through the origin with slope a/x = −ω².

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Elastic potential energy (spring)

Energy stored in a spring: Us=12kx2U_s = \frac{1}{2} kx^2, where xx is instantaneous displacement.

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Total mechanical energy (ideal spring SHM)

Constant (if no damping): E=12mv2+12kx2=12kA2=12mθ2A2E = \frac{1}{2}mv^2 + \frac{1}{2}kx^2 = \frac{1}{2}kA^2 = \frac{1}{2}m\theta^2A^2.

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Speed as a function of displacement (spring SHM)

From energy conservation: v=km(A2x2)v = \sqrt\frac{k}{m}(A^2 - x^2) (speed depends on position; v=0v = 0 at x=±Ax = ±A).