Damped oscillator- graphical interpretation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the damped oscillator equation and the interpretation of angular frequency in relation to a graph of the system. It clarifies that when measuring angular frequency from the graph, the correct value to use is ω, the angular frequency of the damped oscillator, rather than w0. The relationship between the peaks of the damped sinusoid and the pure sinusoid is emphasized, noting that the time between peaks remains constant. Additionally, the discussion mentions that the roots of the cosine function can help identify the times when the displacement is zero. Overall, the key takeaway is that the angular frequency ω is relevant for analyzing the damped oscillator's behavior.
rsaad
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Hi!
The damped oscillator equation is as follows:
x(t)= A exp(γt/2) cos(ωt)

where ω= √( (w0)^2 + (γ^2)/4 )

I have attached a graph of a damped oscillator.
The question is if I use graph to measure angular frequency, will it be w0 or ω?

It should be w0 because if I put γ=0, I should be getting the normal undamped system. The enveloped curve would disappear since exp(γt/2) is 1. BUT then where is ω on the graph!
 

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How can u expect ω in an x-t graph? You will have to calculate.
 
of course I know that. Let m rephrase. The time T between successive maxima is constant. So I consider the complete oscillations, k, for a given time, t. To get angular frequency, W= k* 2pi/t
The question is, what is this this W? is it w0 or is it the angular frequency ω of the damped oscillator
 
it is the angular frequency of damped oscillator.
 
The answer to your question is ω. Peaks in the damped sinusoid e^{-kx} cos(\omega t)occur a little before the peaks in the pure sinusoid cos(\omega t), but by the same amount each time, so the time between peaks is the same as that between the peaks in cos(\omega t).
 
Philip Wood;4113337Peaks in the damped sinusoid [itex said:
e^{-kx} cos(\omega t)[/itex]occur a little before the peaks in the pure sinusoid cos(\omega t), but by the same amount each time, so the time between peaks is the same as that between the peaks in cos(\omega t).

An easier way to see the anwer is ##\omega## is to think about the times when x(t) = 0. They are the roots of ##\cos \omega t = 0##.
 
AlephZero. Agree, but thought rsaad (in post 3) was worried about maxima.
 
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