Circular motion, oscillatory motion, SHM in springs

AI Thread Summary
A particle is undergoing simple harmonic motion (SHM) between points A and E, with a period of 0.2 seconds and an amplitude of 30 cm. The discussion involves calculating the time taken for the particle to move from point B to D under two conditions: traveling towards D and away from D. Initial calculations provided times of 0.0275 seconds and 0.0942 seconds, but the user suspects errors in their approach. Suggestions include using the position equation x = 0.3*sin(ωt) to find the time more accurately. The conversation highlights the complexity of SHM calculations and the importance of verifying results.
kingkong69
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Hey there,
The Question
Points A,B,C,D, and E lie in a straight line. AB=BC=15 cm, CD=10 cm and DE=20 cm. A particle is moving with SHM so that A and E are the extreme positions of its motion. The period of the motion is 0.2s. Find the time the particle takes to get from B to D
i) if it is traveling towards D as it passes through B
ii) if it is traveling away from D as it passes through B.



Formulas
w=2pi/T (w=angular speed, pi=3.14159, T=period)
v^2=w^2(a^2-x^2) (v=velocity, w=angular speed, a=amplitude, x=stretched distance)



My attempt

First of all, the given answer is i) 0.0275s ii) 0.0942s


So, because A and E are the extreme points, with AE=60cm, therefore the a=30cm

Because period is 0.2s, 2*pi/T=angular velocity(w), so w=10pi=31.416

velocity at B: I used the SMH formula for velocity, v^2=w^2(a^2-x^2), x is the stretched distance, which is 0.15m from the center, so v^2=(10pi)^2*(0.3^2-0.15^2), v=8.162ms^-1

velocity at D: Same method applied, x=0.1m here. velocity at D=8.886ms^-1

From here on is just applied the distance formula with given distance, original velocity and final velocity. I think I messed up at this stage.

And finally deriving 0.029s, close but wrong :devil:


Thanks for the help
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Couldn't you just use x = 0.3*sin(ωt) and evaluate t at x = -.15 and x = 0.1? Better yet, put the x equation into your graphing calculator and see what it is for all times.
 
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