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Driven Mass on a Spring, 3A60.39

Topic and Concept:

Location:

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Abstract:

A function generator drives a spring with a suspended mass. The frequency is adjusted until resonance is reached.

Equipment

Location

ID Number

Function Generator

EM, Bay B1 Left, Shelf #3

Pasco Driver

WS, Bay A4, Shelf #2

Coaxial Cable

Rod and tackle cabinet located near main lecture halls

Springs

WS, Bay A4, Shelf #2

100g Mass

ME, Bay A1, Shelf #5

Rod and Clamps

Rod and tackle cabinet located near main lecture halls

Important Setup Notes:

Setup and Procedure:

  1. Vertically mount 3/4" rod to lecture bench using blue table clamp.
  2. Horizontally mount 1/4" rod to the vertical rod using a right angle clamp.
  3. Mount the Pasco driver to the 1/4" rod so that the driving component will move in a vertical direction.
  4. Place the function generator on the table near the rod, and plug it in.
  5. Connect the driver to the function generator with the two wires. Positive to positive. Ground to ground.
  6. Find the shorter of the two springs near the Pasco Drivers that has a banana connector soldered onto one end (see picture below). Hang the spring from the driver.
  7. Hang the 100g mass from the spring.
  8. When ready, turn on the function generator by pressing the "On" button.
  9. The mass will begin to oscillate in a vertical direction. Adjust the frequency of oscillation by changing the driving frequency set on the function generator so that the system approaches resonance (some practice beforehand is recommended). On 12/12/19, resonance frequency was found to be about
  10. 0.797 Hz, and resonance amplitude was about 30 cm (ie 60 cm peak to peak).

Cautions, Warnings, or Safety Concerns:

Discussion:

The dynamics of this system are described by a linear, inhomogeneous, second order, 2D (one spatial dimension, one time dimension) differential equation (see Hyperphysics- Driven Oscillator). The inhomogeneous part comes from the driving force which is sinusoidal having a general form of

F(t) = F0 * cos(ω*t - φd)

where F0 is the driving amplitude, ω is the driving frequency, and φd is the phase angle. F0 and ω are set on the function generator. The steady-state solution (letting t go to infinity) has the form

x(t) = A*cos(ω*t - φ) where A, and φ depend on the specifics of the driving force, the spring constant, damping, and the mass used. After more math, we find that A has the form

A = (F0/m) / Sqrt((ω202)2 + 4*γ22)

where m is the mass, γ encodes the damping information, and ω0 = Sqrt(k/m), k being the spring constant. Since the only variable in our expression for A is ω (we're only varying the driving frequency ω), A will be at a maximum when we minimize the denominator. This gives us ωresonance = Sqrt(ω02 - 2*γ2). We call this value of ω the resonant frequency of the system.

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Videos:

References:

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fw: DrivenMassSpring (last edited 2019-12-11 22:12:56 by srnarf)