Natural frequency of a simple harmonic system

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The discussion focuses on deriving the natural frequency of a system with two circular cylinders and a connecting link. The key equations involve the conservation of energy and the motion of the system described by simple harmonic motion. The user initially miscalculated the kinetic energy of the link due to a frame of reference error, treating the velocities incorrectly. After clarifying the reference frames for the velocities of the link and the center of mass, the user successfully derived the correct natural frequency. The final formula for the natural frequency aligns with the textbook answer once the reference frame issue is resolved.
TomW17
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Homework Statement


Derive the natural frequency f_n of the system composed of two homogeneous circular cylinders, each of mass M, and the connecting link \text{AB} of mass m. Assume small oscillations.
SHM.jpg


Homework Equations


The sum of the kinetic + potential energies in an isolated system remains constant.

An undamped, simple harmonic system has an equation of motion of the form \ddot{\theta} + \omega^{2}_n \theta = 0

The Attempt at a Solution


The sum of the kinetic + potential energy when the system rotates by an angle \theta measured as in the diagram counterclockwise is \sum E = V + T = mg r_0 (1 - \cos \theta ) + \tfrac{1}{2} m v_{AB}^{2} + 2 \times \tfrac{1}{2} M v_{O}^2 + 2 \times \tfrac{1}{2} I_O \dot{\theta}^2 = \text{const.}

where v_O denotes the velocity of the centre of mass of the cylinders, \dot{\theta} denotes the angular velocity of the system (and by extension the angular velocity of the cylinders) and v_{AB} the velocity of the centre of mass of \text{AB}.

E = mgr_0 (1 - \cos \theta ) + \tfrac{1}{2} m (r_0 \dot{\theta})^2 + M (r \dot{\theta})^2 + \tfrac{1}{2} M r^2 \dot{\theta}^2 = \text{const.}
\implies \frac{\text{d}E}{\text{d}t} = mg r_0 \sin \theta \dot{\theta} + m r^{2}_0 \dot{\theta} \ddot{\theta} + 3 Mr^2 \dot{\theta} \ddot{\theta} = 0

using small angle approximation and rearranging...

\ddot{\theta} + \frac{mgr_0}{3Mr^2 + mr^{2}_0} \theta = 0 \implies \omega_n = \sqrt{\frac{mgr_0}{3Mr^2 + mr^{2}_0}} \implies f_n = \frac{1}{2\pi} \omega_n

The answer given in the book is f_n = \frac{1}{2\pi} \sqrt{\frac{mgr_0}{3Mr^2 + m(r-r_0)^{2}}}

Comparing the answers, my problem appears to be that I've calculated the kinetic energy of the link \text{AB} incorrectly but I can't figure out why. My logic was that the angle \theta is the angle between the vertical through the centre of the cylinder and the line connecting the centre of the cylinder and the end of the link \text{AB}, so the velocity of the end of \text{AB} would be equal to \dot{\theta} r_0 (angular velocity x arm) and as \text{AB} remains horizontal throughout, the velocity of the centre of mass of \text{AB} would be the same as the velocity of its end.

Help?
 
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You could put in a few more steps to help a tired old duffer understand how you get each thing.

It looks like you have ##v_{AB}## as ##r_0 \dot{\theta}##, and ##V_O## as ##r \dot{\theta}##. But you need to be sure that these are both in the same frame of reference. Are these both with respect to the ground?
 
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DEvens said:
You could put in a few more steps to help a tired old duffer understand how you get each thing.

It looks like you have ##v_{AB}## as ##r_0 \dot{\theta}##, and ##V_O## as ##r \dot{\theta}##. But you need to be sure that these are both in the same frame of reference. Are these both with respect to the ground?
Ahaa, there's my problem. No, I've calculated v_{AB} to be wrt the centre of the cylinder but v_O is wrt the ground.
 
DEvens said:
You could put in a few more steps to help a tired old duffer understand how you get each thing.

It looks like you have ##v_{AB}## as ##r_0 \dot{\theta}##, and ##V_O## as ##r \dot{\theta}##. But you need to be sure that these are both in the same frame of reference. Are these both with respect to the ground?
Got the right answer when I take ##v_{AB}## wrt the ground. Thanks for your help!
 
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The book claims the answer is that all the magnitudes are the same because "the gravitational force on the penguin is the same". I'm having trouble understanding this. I thought the buoyant force was equal to the weight of the fluid displaced. Weight depends on mass which depends on density. Therefore, due to the differing densities the buoyant force will be different in each case? Is this incorrect?

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