Aows said:
Homework Statement
Suppose at time zero, the bob was drawn upward four units from the equilibrium position, let C=2, K=2, m=1 lbm, initial speed=2 unit/sec find an expression for body's position.
and in the solution it says: y''+6y'+5y=0
my question is: from where does the numbers (6) and (5) that is in te above DE came from ?
Homework Equations
spring equation:
my''+cy'+ky=f(t)
consider f(t) =0
The quote above is the original description of the problem, and the post title suggest that this is supposed to be some sort of spring-mass problem. Right away, there is some concern about just what sort of a system this is.
(1) I know the term bob (and have known it for about 70 years) in reference to a pendulum bob, but the post title speaks of a spring mass system. They are not quite the same thing. Is it a spring-mass-damper system, or is it a pendulum, or perhaps something else. A simple figure would resolve all doubt, which is why I asked for that.
(2) The problem statement speaks of the bob being "drawn upward four units." What does this mean? If this is in fact a simple pendulum, does it perhaps mean that the mass is drawn to the side to initiate the motion. No, probably not, or it would not have said "upward." Is it a hanging spring-mass system? Perhaps, and that would seem to fit the sense of upward, but we don't know that this is actually the type of system being discussed.
(3) Most folks when speaking of a mass refer to it as such. The term "bob" is used exclusively in terms of a simple pendulum as far as I am aware. The OP eventually did identify this as a mass, but it was not in the initial statement. If it is a pendulum, why not say so? If it is block hanging on a spring/damper combination, then the term "bob" is not very appropriate at all.
The main point of the questions is "where do the numbers 6 and 5 in the differential equation come from?" As the OP observed in one of his comment, it looks like a simple plug-and-chug problem, but then, the given solution does not seem to fit. What could be the matter?
(4) It may simply be a hanging spring-mass-damper system and the given ODE is simply an error from the problem source. But we have been denied a figure and don't know that, so other possibilities must be considered.
(5) There are an endless number of other kinematically complicated systems for which (a) the mass of a single (principal) mass is not the effective system mass, (b) the actual stiffness of a spring is not the effective stiffness of the system, and (c) the actual damper coefficient is not the effective system damping coefficient. When kinematics enters strongly into the situation, all bets are off on the simple answer. Could this be the reason the given ODE has unexpected coefficients? Maybe, but we are denied a sketch to show what sort of system is under consideration.
Shall we jump to the conclusion that the problem answer given is in error, or should we consider other possibilities? With no figure, no knowledge of just what sort of system is under consideration, I am reluctant to conclude that the given answer is in error.
Mark44 says, "the OP is not asking how to solve the problem." Well, from my perspective, he is asking how to resolve the discrepancy he has observed, and that may well be the same as asking how to solve the problem. If we could just have a figure, almost all of this would vanish, but without the figure (or a very clear verbal system description), we simply cannot give meaningful answers.