Hi anandan111, http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/5725/red5e5etimes5e5e45e5e25.gif
The transient dies out as its energy is dissipated in the circuit's resistance. How much resistance is in your circuit? http://img803.imageshack.us/img803/4666/holly1756.gif [/
Hi anandan111; Welcome to Physics Forums.
You're circuit contains two so-called "reactive" components; a capacitor and an inductor. Both are energy storage devices which store energy differently, and can trade energy back and forth (oscillate). One stores energy in an electric field while the other stores it in a magnetic field.
When power is first applied to your circuit it is equivalent to "hitting" the LC circuit with a step input (simulation starts and DC supply goes from 0V to 1V). This kicks off the oscillation that you're seeing. Since this is a simulation with ideal components (no resistive losses) the oscillations will continue indefinitely. In real life with real components with imperfect conductors, they would soon die away as energy is given up to Ohmic heating.
The amplitude of the oscillation on the capacitor is 1V (yielding a 2V peak-to-peak measurement):
Vcap = (cos(ωt) - 1) V
assuming that the reference node (negative lead of your "meter") is placed at the junction of the C and L, thus the zero reference for the oscillation is shifted by a "DC bias" established by the "step" of the step function.
In the first instant, when the +1V step is applied, the capacitor cannot change its potential instantly (initially uncharged, thus 0V) so this drives the potential at the L-C junction to +1V with respect to the battery negative lead. Subsequent energy trading with the inductor pushes the potential there from +1V through zero to -1V.
Thank you very much for your warm welcome! =D
regarding the maximum amplitude of the capacitor, how come the capacitor does not have a negative amplitude (-1V)? Why does it start from 0V and not oscillate from the 0V position?
Thank you for your help once again =D May I know if this is considered a filter as well? I have made some searches and discovered that LC circuit is also called a "tank" circuit.