This MCQ module is based on: Periodic Motion Shm
Periodic Motion Shm
This assessment will be based on: Periodic Motion Shm
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Periodic Motion Shm
13.1 Introduction — Repetition in Nature
Many motions around us repeat themselves — a pendulum swinging, a child on a swing, the tides rising and falling, the strings of a guitar vibrating, atoms in a crystal jiggling, the heart beating. Such periodic motion is everywhere in physics, from sub-atomic vibrations (10¹⁵ Hz) to galactic rotations (10⁻¹⁵ Hz).
13.2 Period and Frequency
Frequency ν (or f): number of repetitions per unit time. ν = 1/T. SI unit: hertz (Hz). 1 Hz = 1 cycle/s.
Angular frequency ω: ω = 2πν = 2π/T. SI unit: rad/s.
| Phenomenon | Period T | Frequency ν |
|---|---|---|
| Heartbeat (resting) | ~ 0.85 s | ~ 1.2 Hz |
| Pendulum 1 m long | 2.0 s | 0.5 Hz |
| Tuning fork (A note) | 2.27 ms | 440 Hz |
| FM radio wave | 10⁻⁸ s | ~ 100 MHz |
| Caesium clock transition | 108.8 ps | 9.19 GHz |
| Earth's rotation | 86 400 s | 1.16 × 10⁻⁵ Hz |
13.3 Displacement, Amplitude and Phase
For oscillatory motion, the deviation of the particle from its equilibrium position is called the displacement x(t). The maximum magnitude of x is the amplitude A. The motion is bounded between −A and +A.
13.4 Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)
The simplest, most universal kind of oscillation: a particle is pulled back to equilibrium by a force proportional to its displacement and directed oppositely:
The equation of motion is therefore:
The general solution is sinusoidal:
Here A = amplitude, ω = angular frequency, φ = phase constant. Three pieces of information determine the motion: how big (A), how fast (ω), and where it starts (φ).
The argument (ωt + φ) is called the phase of the motion. φ alone is the phase at t = 0 (initial phase or epoch). Two SHMs with the same ω but different φ are said to have a phase difference — physically meaning one starts later than the other.
13.4.1 Why SHM Matters
Almost any system near a stable equilibrium behaves like an SHM oscillator for small displacements. Reason: any smooth potential V(x) with a minimum at x = 0 can be Taylor-expanded as V(x) ≈ V(0) + ½ V''(0) x², giving a linear restoring force F = −V'(x) = −V''(0) x. Hence atomic vibrations, electrical circuits, swinging buildings, water waves, even the field oscillations of light — all approximate SHM at small amplitudes. SHM is the local language of all oscillation.
Worked Examples
Example 13.1: Period and frequency from given ω
For SHM with x(t) = 0.05 cos(8πt + π/4) m, find amplitude, angular frequency, period, frequency, and initial phase.
At t = 0, x(0) = 0.05 cos(π/4) = 0.05 × 0.707 = 0.0354 m.
Example 13.2: Identifying SHM
Which of these motions are SHM? (a) x(t) = 5 sin(3t) (b) x(t) = 4 sin(2t) + 3 cos(2t) (c) x(t) = 7 sin²(πt) (d) x(t) = 6 + 2 cos(πt).
(b) SHM: 4 sin(2t) + 3 cos(2t) = 5 sin(2t + φ) with φ = arctan(3/4); ω = 2.
(c) Periodic, not SHM: sin²(πt) = (1 − cos(2πt))/2 — sinusoid plus a constant offset, not SHM about origin (but is SHM about x = 7/2 with ω = 2π).
(d) SHM about x₀ = 6, ω = π, A = 2.
Example 13.3: Two oscillators, same ω, different phase
Two oscillators have x_1(t) = 3 cos(2t) and x_2(t) = 3 cos(2t − π/3). Find their phase difference and the time lag of x_2 behind x_1.
Interactive: SHM Time-Graph Viewer L3 Apply
Drag A, ω and φ to see x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ) live on the graph.
- For each motion, ask: does it return to the same state after a fixed T? (Periodic test.)
- If yes, ask: is the restoring force proportional to displacement from equilibrium? (SHM test.)
Pendulum (small swing): periodic and approximately SHM.
Heartbeat: approximately periodic, definitely not SHM (complex pulse shape).
Blinking light: periodic (square-wave), not SHM.
Bouncing ball: approximately periodic on a hard floor (decaying), not SHM (impulsive contact, not linear force).
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. L1 Remember Define period and frequency of a periodic motion.
Q2. L2 Understand Why is a uniformly rotating object not SHM, even though it is periodic?
Q3. L3 Apply Find A, ω, T, ν and initial phase for the given x(t).
Q4. L4 Analyse The graph of x(t) is shifted to the left by 0.5 s. What new phase must be used so that the same x(t) describes the shifted curve?
Q5. L5 Evaluate A student says that x(t) = A cos(ωt) and x(t) = A sin(ωt) describe the same SHM. Is this true? Justify with an example.
Assertion-Reason Questions
Assertion (A): Every SHM is periodic.
Reason (R): SHM is described by x(t) = A cos(ωt + φ), which has period 2π/ω.
Assertion (A): Every periodic motion is SHM.
Reason (R): All periodic motions repeat in equal intervals.
Assertion (A): Two SHMs of identical amplitude and frequency but with phase difference π are said to be "out of phase".
Reason (R): A phase shift of π corresponds to half a period in time.