Manraj singh
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I have googled it but couldn't find a simple, easy to understand answer answer. Why does a body have a particular natural frequency. Can it be changed by any way?
Manraj singh said:I have googled it but couldn't find a simple, easy to understand answer answer. Why does a body have a particular natural frequency. Can it be changed by any way?
jagdishdash said:natural frequency of a body depends on its density which is an intensive property of that body
as density varies body to body of different elements
natural frequency for that particular body made of that particular element remains the same
we can't change natural frequency easily if density some changes then natural frequency will change
natural frequency =1/√density
that's the relation between natural frequency and density
hope u understood
nasu said:What do you mean by "natural frequency of a body" when you write all this?
Fish swim bladders are actually really good for this. But I'm not sure that's the kind of "body" the OP was thinking of...sophiecentaur said:Animal tissue is very 'lossy' for mechanical vibrations. Hence, I would think it very unlikely that you could stimulate a mechanical resonance at any frequency.
NascentOxygen said:I reckon there's sure to be a frequency of back-and-forth shaking where the brain shows greatest tendency/propensity to slosh around in the cranium. Though I'm not volunteering to be the experimental subject.
olivermsun said:Fish swim bladders are actually really good for this. But I'm not sure that's the kind of "body" the OP was thinking of...
Vanadium 50 said:For heaven's sake - we've spent 11 messages trying to guess what the OP had in mind. Does it not make more sense to let him or her explain it?
Unlikely - a "body" is just an object. It just isn't in common use for native English speakers. The OP is almost certainly asking about this:sophiecentaur said:I never thought of that example when I made my reply but I was thinking about human 'bodies'.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_frequencyNatural frequency is the frequency at which a system tends to oscillate in the absence of any driving or damping force.[1]