Green's Function with repulsive force

teme92
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Homework Statement


Consider an object subject to a linear repulsive force, ##F = kx##. Show that the Green’s function for this object is given by:

##G(t-t^\prime)=\frac{1}{m\gamma}sinh(\gamma(t-t^\prime))##

where ##\gamma=\sqrt{\frac{k}{m}}##

Homework Equations


##sinhx=\frac{e^x+e^{-x}}{2}##

The Attempt at a Solution


So when I'm trying to make the Green's Function I start with:

##x(t)=\int_0^tG(t-t^\prime)F(t^\prime)dt^\prime##

##F(t^\prime)=kx## so:

##x(t)=\int_0^tG(t-t^\prime)(kx)dt^\prime##

For an impulse I think ##G(t-t^\prime)=\frac{v(t-t^\prime)}{\Delta p}## where ##\Delta p = mv-0=mv##. However I don't know what to do for a repulsive force. Also I don't know how to get to the ##sinh## part. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
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teme92 said:

Homework Statement


Consider an object subject to a linear repulsive force, ##F = kx##. Show that the Green’s function for this object is given by:

##G(t-t^\prime)=\frac{1}{m\gamma}sinh(\gamma(t-t^\prime))##

where ##\gamma=\sqrt{\frac{k}{m}}##

Homework Equations


##sinhx=\frac{e^x+e^{-x}}{2}##

The Attempt at a Solution


So when I'm trying to make the Green's Function I start with:

##x(t)=\int_0^tG(t-t^\prime)F(t^\prime)dt^\prime##

##F(t^\prime)=kx## so:

##x(t)=\int_0^tG(t-t^\prime)(kx)dt^\prime##

For an impulse I think ##G(t-t^\prime)=\frac{v(t-t^\prime)}{\Delta p}## where ##\Delta p = mv-0=mv##. However I don't know what to do for a repulsive force. Also I don't know how to get to the ##sinh## part. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Hint: ##F=kx## tells you that ##m\ddot{x}(t) = kx(t)##...what does your equation for the Green's Function tell you ##\ddot{x}(t)## is?
 
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