Forest UCM Osc Resonance
Oscillators driven by a source in resonance
Complete Solution for the Sinusoidally Driven Damped oscillator
where
The first two terms in the solution are exponentially decaying and tend to damp the oscillation.
The last term in the solution is the response of the system to a sinusoidal driving force.
Thus you can apply a force to prevent the oscillations from dying out.
Resonance
Resonance is the condition that your applied sinusoidal force is set to a frequency that will maximize the damped oscillations.
This means that the amplitude
is maximized.since
then for a given forced amplitude
you can maximize the oscillation by minimizing the denominator term
since
is the amount of friction being applied remove energy from the system and is the natural oscilaltion frequency (constants that characterize the system)the only term you can change is the drive frequency
of your applied sinusoidal force.if your set your sinusoidal force to a frequncy
then the denominator is minimazed thereby maximizing the amplitude of the forced oscillation.
Resonance occurs when your applied sinusoidal force matches the natural frequency of the oscillaor.
This amplude is
Quality factor (Q)
While the natural frequency
determine the frequency where the maximum oscillation can occur, the dampening force parameter determines the width of the resonance.
If you look at the equation for the amplitude squared
for the case that
You get a maximum amplitude when
The magnitude of
is cut in half if the denominator becomesreturning back to the original form of the denominator
you can have the denominator be
or
Problem 5.41
The "sharpness" of the resonance is quantified in terms of a quality factor given by the ration of the natural frequency to the dampening as
The above is proportions to the amount of energy stored in one cycle of the oscillation divided by the average energy dissipated in one cycle.