University Physics Volume 1
18th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168277
Author: William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher: OpenStax - Rice University
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Chapter 15, Problem 2CQ
(a) If frequency is not constant for some oscillation, can the oscillation be
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University Physics Volume 1
Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding Why would it hurt more if...Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding Identify one way you...Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding Identify an object that...Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding An engineer builds two...Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding Why are completely...Ch. 15 - Check Your Understanding A famous magic trick...Ch. 15 - What conditions must be met to produce SHM?Ch. 15 - (a) If frequency is not constant for some...Ch. 15 - Give an example of a simple harmonic oscillator,...Ch. 15 - Explain why you expect an object made of a stiff...
Ch. 15 - As you pass a freight truck with a trailer on a...Ch. 15 - Some people modify cars to be much closer to the...Ch. 15 - Describe a system in which elastic potential...Ch. 15 - Explain in terms of energy how dissipative forces...Ch. 15 - The temperature of the atmosphere oscillates from...Ch. 15 - Can this analogy of SHM to circular motion be...Ch. 15 - Can this analogy of SHM to circular motion be...Ch. 15 - Can this analogy of SHM to circular motion be...Ch. 15 - A pendulum clock works by measuring the period of...Ch. 15 - With the use of a phase shift, the position of an...Ch. 15 - Give an example of a damped harmonic oscillator....Ch. 15 - How would a car bounce after a bump under each of...Ch. 15 - Most harmonic oscillators are damped and, if...Ch. 15 - Why are soldiers in general ordered to “route...Ch. 15 - Do you think there is any harmonic motion in the...Ch. 15 - Some engineers use sound to diagnose performance...Ch. 15 - Prove that using x(t)=Asin(t+) will produce the...Ch. 15 - What is the period of 60.0 Hz of electrical power?Ch. 15 - If your heart rate is 150 beats per minute during...Ch. 15 - Find the frequency of a tuning fork that takes...Ch. 15 - A stroboscope is set to flash every 8.00105 s....Ch. 15 - A tire has a tread pattern with a crevice every...Ch. 15 - Each piston of an engine makes a sharp sound every...Ch. 15 - A type of cuckoo clock keeps time by having a mass...Ch. 15 - A mass m0is attached to a spring and hung...Ch. 15 - A 0.500-kg mass suspended from a spring oscillates...Ch. 15 - By how much leeway (both percentage and mass)...Ch. 15 - Fish are hung on a spring scale to determine their...Ch. 15 - It is weigh-in time for the local under-85-kg...Ch. 15 - One type of BB gun uses a spring-driven plunger to...Ch. 15 - When an 80.0-kg man stands on a pogo stick, the...Ch. 15 - A spring has a length of 0.200 m when a 0.300-kg...Ch. 15 - The length of nylon rope from which a mountain...Ch. 15 - The motion of a mass on a spring hung vertically,...Ch. 15 - (a) A novelty clock has a 0.0100-kg-mass object...Ch. 15 - Reciprocating motion uses the rotation of a motor...Ch. 15 - A student stands on the edge of a merry-go-round...Ch. 15 - What is the length of a pendulum that has a period...Ch. 15 - Some people think a pendulum with a period of 1.00...Ch. 15 - What is the period of a 1.00-m-long pendulum?Ch. 15 - How long does it take a child on a swing to...Ch. 15 - The pendulum on a cuckoo clock is 5.00-cm long....Ch. 15 - Two parakeets sit on a swing with their combined...Ch. 15 - (a) A pendulum that has a period of 3.00000 s and...Ch. 15 - A pendulum with a period of 2.00000 s in one...Ch. 15 - (a) What is the effect on the period of a pendulum...Ch. 15 - The amplitude of a lightly damped oscillator...Ch. 15 - How much energy must the shock absorbers of a...Ch. 15 - If a car has a suspension system with a force...Ch. 15 - (a) How much will a spring that has a force...Ch. 15 - Suppose you have a 0.750-kg object on a horizontal...Ch. 15 - Suppose you attach an object with mass m to a...Ch. 15 - A diver on a diving board is undergoing SHM. Her...Ch. 15 - Suppose a diving board with no one on it bounces...Ch. 15 - The device pictured in the following figure...Ch. 15 - A mass is placed on a frictionless, horizontal...Ch. 15 - Find the ratio of the new/old periods of a...Ch. 15 - At what rate will a pendulum clock run on the...Ch. 15 - If a pendulum-driven clock gains 5.00 s/day, what...Ch. 15 - A 2.00-kg object hangs, at rest, on a 1.00-m-long...Ch. 15 - A 2.00-kg object hangs, at rest, on a 1.00-m-long...Ch. 15 - Assume that a pendulum used to drive a grandfather...Ch. 15 - A 2.00-kg block lies at rest on a frictionless...Ch. 15 - A suspension bridge oscillates with an effective...Ch. 15 - Near the top of the Citigroup Center building in...Ch. 15 - Parcels of air (small volumes of air) in a stable...Ch. 15 - Consider the van der Waals potential U(r)=U0[( R 0...Ch. 15 - Suppose the length of a clock’s pendulum is...Ch. 15 - (a) The springs of a pickup truck act like a...
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- An automobile with a mass of 1000 kg, including passengers, settles 1.0 cm closer to the road for every additional 100 kg of passengers. It is driven with a constant horizontal component of speed 20 km/h over a washboard road with sinusoidal bumps. The amplitude and wavelength of the sine curve are 5.0 cm and 20 cm, respectively. The distance between the front and back wheels is 2.4 m. Find the amplitude of oscillation of the automobile, assuming it moves vertically as an undamped driven harmonic oscillator. Neglect the mass of the wheels and springs and assume that the wheels are always in contact with the road.arrow_forwardIf a car has a suspension system with a force constant of 5.00104 N/m , how much energy must the car’s shocks remove to dampen an oscillation starting with a maximum displacement of 0.0750 m?arrow_forwardGive an example of a simple harmonic oscillator, specifically noting how its frequency is independent of amplitude.arrow_forward
- Can this analogy of SHM to circular motion be carried out with an object oscillating on a spring vertically hung from the ceiling? Why or why not? If given the choice, would you prefer to use a sine function or a cosine function to model the motion?arrow_forwardIf the amplitude of a damped oscillator decreases to 1/e of its initial value after n periods, show that the frequency of the oscillator must be approximately [1 − (8π2n2)−1] times the frequency of the corresponding undamped oscillator.arrow_forwardIn an engine, a piston oscillates with simple harmonic motion so that its position varies according to the expression x=5.00cos(2t+6) where x is in centimeters and t is in seconds. At t = 0, find (a) the position of the piston, (b) its velocity, and (c) its acceleration. Find (d) the period and (e) the amplitude of the motion.arrow_forward
- Most harmonic oscillators are damped and, if undriven, eventually come to a stop. Why?arrow_forwardShow that the time rate of change of mechanical energy for a damped, undriven oscillator is given by dE/dt = bv2 and hence is always negative. To do so, differentiate the expression for the mechanical energy of an oscillator, E=12mv2+12kx2, and use Equation 12.28.arrow_forwardWhich of the following statements is not true regarding a massspring system that moves with simple harmonic motion in the absence of friction? (a) The total energy of the system remains constant. (b) The energy of the system is continually transformed between kinetic and potential energy. (c) The total energy of the system is proportional to the square of the amplitude. (d) The potential energy stored in the system is greatest when the mass passes through the equilibrium position. (e) The velocity of the oscillating mass has its maximum value when the mass passes through the equilibrium position.arrow_forward
- Show that angular frequency of a physical pendulum phy=mgrCM/I (Eq. 16.33) equals the angular frequency of a simple pendulum smp=g/, (Eq. 16.29) in the case of a particle at the end of a string of length .arrow_forwardA 200-g block is attached to a horizontal spring and executes simple harmonic motion with a period of 0.250 s. The total energy of the system is 2.00 J. Find (a) the force constant of the spring and (b) the amplitude of the motion.arrow_forwardFor a damped, driven oscillator, show that the average kinetic energy is the same at a frequency of a given number of octaves* above the kinetic energy resonance as at a frequency of the same number of octaves below resonance.arrow_forward
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SIMPLE HARMONIC MOTION (Physics Animation); Author: EarthPen;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjkUcJkGd3Y;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY