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An object moving in simple harmonic motion has an amplitude of 0. 07 m and a maximum acceleration of 50 m/s2. What is the frequency of the system?.

User Juan Sosa
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1 Answer

5 votes

Answer:

Approximately
42\; {\rm Hz}.

Step-by-step explanation:

Let
A denote the amplitude and let
f denote the frequency of this Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM.) Assume that displacement is
0 at time
t = 0.

The displacement of this SHM oscillator at time
t can be modelled with the sine function:


x(t) = A\, \sin((2\, \pi\, f)\, t).

Apply the chain rule to differentiate displacement
x(t) with respect to time to find velocity
v(t):


v(t) = (2\, \pi\, f)\, A\, \cos((2\, \pi\, f)\, t).

Differentiate velocity
v(t) with respect to time to find acceleration
a(t):


a(t) = -(2\, \pi\, f)^(2)\, A\, \sin((2\, \pi\, f)\, t).

Note that as long as
x(t) \\e 0:


\begin{aligned}(a(t))/(x(t)) &= (-(2\, \pi\, f)^(2)\, A\, \sin((2\, \pi\, f)\, t))/(A\, \sin((2\, \pi\, f)\, t)) = -(2\, \pi\, f)^(2)\end{aligned}.

In other words, as long as
x(t) \\e 0, the ratio between
x and
a would be equal to
(-1)\, (2\, \pi\, f)^(2).

The amplitude
A of an SHM is the maximum value of displacement
x. Additionally, the magnitude of acceleration
a is maximized whenever displacement
x is maximized.

In other words, when displacement is maximized,
x = A = 0.07\; {\rm m}. The magnitude of acceleration at that moment would also be maximized:
|a| = 50\; {\rm m\cdot s^(-2)}.

Since
x > 0 and the direction of acceleration is opposite to that of displacement,
a < 0. Therefore,
a = (-50)\; {\rm m\cdot s^(-2)}.

Since
x \\e 0,
(-1)\, (2\, \pi\, f)^(2) = a / x. Therefore:


\begin{aligned}f &amp;= (1)/(2\, \pi)\, \sqrt{-(a)/(x)} \\ &amp;= (1)/(2\, \pi)\, \sqrt{-((-50))/(0.07)}\; {\rm s^(-1)} \\ &amp;\approx 42\; {\rm Hz}\end{aligned}.

User Hienz
by
7.7k points