Driven Mass on a Spring, 3A60.39
Topic and Concept:
Oscillations, 3A60. Driven Mechanical Resonance
Location:
Cabinet: Waves and Sound (WS)
Bay: (A4 Right)
Shelf: #1
Abstract:
A function generator drives a spring with a suspended mass. The frequency is adjusted until resonance is reached.
Equipment |
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ID Number |
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Function Generator |
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Pasco Driver |
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Coaxial Cable |
Rod and tackle cabinet located near main lecture halls |
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Springs |
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100g Mass |
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Rod and Clamps |
Rod and tackle cabinet located near main lecture halls |
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Important Setup Notes:
- Demonstration may require practice.
Setup and Procedure:
- Vertically mount 3/4" rod to lecture bench using blue table clamp.
- Horizontally mount 1/4" rod to the vertical rod using a right angle clamp.
- Mount the Pasco driver to the 1/4" rod so that the driving component will move in a vertical direction.
- Place the function generator on the table near the rod, and plug it in.
- Connect the driver to the function generator with the two wires. Positive to positive. Ground to ground.
- 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.
- Hang the 100g mass from the spring.
- When ready, turn on the function generator by pressing the "On" button.
- 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
- 0.797 Hz, and resonance amplitude was about 30 cm (ie 60 cm peak to peak).
Cautions, Warnings, or Safety Concerns:
- N/A
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((ω2-ω02)2 + 4*γ2*ω2)
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:
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