Mechanical ad Electrical vibration EASY question ?

dwilmer
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Mechanical ad Electrical vibration EASY question please help?

In Boyce and Diprima textbook it says that:

mu'' + ku = 0 .

Then it says the general solution of this is:

u = Acos (w^2)t + B sin (w^2)t , where w^2 = k/m


It provides no explanation how it arrives at this. Where does the cos and sin come from?

PS: it is supposed to be the greek letter w, whatever that is called and it also has a sub-0 on it, but i didnt include it because it looks confusing without the right fonts.

please help, thanks
 
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Hi dwilmer! Welcome to PF! :smile:

(have a little omega: ω and try using the X2 tag just above the Reply box :wink:)
dwilmer said:
mu'' + ku = 0 .

Then it says the general solution of this is:

u = Acos (w^2)t + B sin (w^2)t , where w^2 = k/m


It provides no explanation how it arrives at this. Where does the cos and sin come from?

Because [cos(ωt)]'' is obviously -ω2cos(ωt), and [sin(ωt)]'' is obviously -ω2sin(ωt) :smile:
 
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