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Section 6.6

Section 6.6. Simple Harmonic Motion. Describe the motion of a rider on a ferris wheel relative to the ground. Describe the motion of a buoy in an ocean relative to the ocean floor:. Describe the motion of a vibrating horizontal guitar string. Describe the motion of a piston in a cylinder.

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Section 6.6

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  1. Section 6.6 Simple Harmonic Motion

  2. Describe the motion of a rider on a ferris wheel relative to the ground.

  3. Describe the motion of a buoy in an ocean relative to the ocean floor:

  4. Describe the motion of a vibrating horizontal guitar string.

  5. Describe the motion of a piston in a cylinder.

  6. Describe the motion of the mass in a mass-spring system:

  7. Section 6.6 • simple harmonic motion – repetitious motion that would continue without stopping if there were no outside forces on the object

  8. Section 6.6 • Imagine attaching a pencil to a guitar string, setting the string into motion while sliding a sheet of paper to the right underneath the string and pencil. • http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/tutorials/shm/Q.shm.html

  9. Section 6.6 • Or imagine attaching a pencil to the outside edge of a circular object and sliding a sheet of paper to the right while the circle was turning counterclockwise. • http://www.nhn.ou.edu/~walkup/demonstrations/WebAssignments/HarmonicMotion001.htm

  10. Section 6.6 • If you were to trace out the object’s motion over time (or some other x-coordinate quantity), the result would be a sine or cosine function. • The motion of objects with simple harmonic motion is represented by sine and cosine functions.

  11. Section 6.6 • If we know some information about the object’s motion, typically the position at some time and its frequency, then we can write an equation that will model its motion.

  12. Section 6.6 Problem - solving strategy: • make and label a diagram • make and label a sine or cosine function graph • write an equation to represent the graph • answer the question

  13. Section 6.6 – Example 1 A buoy floats in a harbor at a location where the water depth is 26 ft. As waves pass the buoy it rises and falls. The buoy moves a total of 8 ft from its lowest to its highest point every 12 seconds. Assume the buoy is at its low point at t = 0. Find the height of the buoy after 15 seconds.

  14. Section 6.6 – Example 1 Sketch a diagram:

  15. Section 6.6 – Example 1 Sketch a graph to represent the motion:

  16. Section 6.6 – Example 1 Write a sine or cosine equation: Answer the question:

  17. Section 6.6 – Example 2 A mass in a spring-mass system is at rest 5 ft from a 10 ft ceiling. The mass is given a push up at time, t = 0. The mass is 2 ft from the ceiling at its highest point and it takes 4 seconds to complete a cycle and return to its starting position. What is the mass’ height 10 seconds after being set into motion?

  18. Section 6.6 – Example 2 Sketch a diagram:

  19. Section 6.6 – Example 2 Sketch a graph to represent the motion:

  20. Section 6.6 – Example 2 Write a sine or cosine equation: Answer the question:

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