Alrighty, so for a maths unit I'm doing at uni I had to form and solve the differential equation of motion for a non-damped forced harmonic oscillator suspended from a ceiling (note we've defined positive x as the downward direction);
mx'' + kx = mg + Fsin(wt), where (units are all SI, so I'm neglecting to mention them) m = 1, k = 400, g = 9.8m/s, F = 20
My result is;
x = -0.0245cos(20t) + w/(w^2 - 400)sin(20t) + 20/(400 - w^2)sin(wt) + 0.0245
This was easy enough, but now I need to find for what frequencies (w) does the extension of the spring never exceed one metre? i.e. |x| <= 1.
Obviously I need this to be true for all t, but I don't know how to find this. I tried just using the sum of the amplitude terms, but my result was a tiny interval which I knew to be incorrect. This makes sense, particularly as the two trig terms with the same frequency will never add 100% constructively.
My problem is now I have no idea how to approach this.
So tell me Escapist, how do I solve this?
mx'' + kx = mg + Fsin(wt), where (units are all SI, so I'm neglecting to mention them) m = 1, k = 400, g = 9.8m/s, F = 20
My result is;
x = -0.0245cos(20t) + w/(w^2 - 400)sin(20t) + 20/(400 - w^2)sin(wt) + 0.0245
This was easy enough, but now I need to find for what frequencies (w) does the extension of the spring never exceed one metre? i.e. |x| <= 1.
Obviously I need this to be true for all t, but I don't know how to find this. I tried just using the sum of the amplitude terms, but my result was a tiny interval which I knew to be incorrect. This makes sense, particularly as the two trig terms with the same frequency will never add 100% constructively.
My problem is now I have no idea how to approach this.
So tell me Escapist, how do I solve this?