The rate at which a damped, driven oscillator does work

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on analyzing a damped oscillator driven by a periodic force. The main tasks include finding the rate of work done by the driving force, showing that the average power over cycles equals mβω²A², and determining that this average power is maximized at resonance when the driving frequency matches the natural frequency. A participant struggles with the integration process to derive the average power and seeks clarification on incorporating phase differences into their calculations. The conversation emphasizes the relationship between the driving frequency, natural frequency, and the resulting amplitude and phase of the oscillator's motion.
cowey19
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Homework Statement



Consider a damped oscillator, with natural frequency ω_naut and damping constant both fixed, that is driven by a force F(t)=F_naut*cos(ωt).

a) Find the rate P(t) at which F(t) does work and show that the average (P)avg over any number of complete cycles is mβω2A2. b) Verify that this is the same as the average rate at which energy is lost to the resistive force. c) Show that as ω is varied, (P)avg is maximum when ω=ω_naut; that is, the resonance of the power occurs at ω=ω_naut (exactly).

Homework Equations



(P)avg= 1/τ ∫ Fv dt
F= F_naut*cos(ωt)
x(t)= A*cos(ωt)
v(t)= -Aωsin(ωt)
ω= √[(ω_naut)2 - β2 ]

The Attempt at a Solution



I plugged in the equation for F(t) and v(t) in the integral ( P(t) = ∫Fv ) and used u substitution, making cos(ωt) the "u" and -ωsin(ωt)dt the "du".

So I then had ∫(F_naut)Au du

After integrating and plugging cos(ωt) back in for u, I had:

(P)avg = (1/2τ)*(F_naut)A*cos2(ωt), integrated from -τ/2 to τ/2.

This is where I hit a problem. My work doesn't seem like it will be equal to mβω2A2. Because I can't solve this, I can't figure out the next two parts either. Did I make a mathematical error in integrating, or did I set up the integral wrong? Thank you!
 
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cowey19 said:

Homework Equations



(P)avg= 1/τ ∫ Fv dt
F= F_naut*cos(ωt)
x(t)= A*cos(ωt)
v(t)= -Aωsin(ωt)
ω= √[(ω_naut)2 - β2 ]

If the oscillator is driven by F=Fo cos(ωt) the oscillator will move with the frequency of the driving force, but with a phase difference, x(t)=A(cosωt+θ)
Both the phase difference θ and the amplitude A depend on the natural frequency and the driving frequency.

ehild
 
Yes, but how can I incorporate that into my set up?
 
x(t)=A(cosωt+θ). v(t)= -Aωsin(ωt+θ). Find A and θ in terms of ω_naut, ω and F_naut, and calculate the integral 1/τ ∫ Fv dt.

ehild
 
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