Simple Harmonic Motion amplitude

AI Thread Summary
An object in simple harmonic motion (SHM) has a period of 4.0 seconds and an amplitude of 10 cm. To determine the time taken to move from x = 0.0 cm to x = 6.0 cm, the equations x(t) = Acos(wt) or x(t) = Asin(wt) can be used, with w calculated as π/2. The key steps involve isolating time for both positions and finding the difference, with the motion being unidirectional during the first quarter of the period. Correct unit conversion is crucial for accurate calculations, leading to a time of approximately 0.4 seconds for the object to reach x = 6.0 cm.
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Homework Statement



An object in SHM oscillates with a period of 4.0 s and an amplitude of 10 cm. How long does the object take to move from x = 0.0 cm to x = 6.0 cm?

Homework Equations



T = 2*pi/w

x(t) = Acos(wt) or x(t) = Asin(wt)

The Attempt at a Solution



T = 4.0 s
A = 0.10 m

w = 2*pi/T
w = 2*pi/(4.0)
w = pi/2

What happens now?
 
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Good start!
Ask yourself at what time is it at x=0? What time at x = 6 cm?
The difference between the two times is your final answer.
 
I keep running into the issue of how to visualize the relative positions of these functions at different values. If I plug in 0.0 cm (or 0.0 m rather) into x(t) = Acos(wt), how do I know whether the function is moving positively ("up" a cosine crest) or negatively ("down" a cosine trough)? If it's positive, then the position difference will be the desired 6 cm. If it's negative, then the difference will be 10 + 10 + 6 = 26cm. How do I set this up appropriately in light of this?
 
Delphi51 said:
Good start!
Ask yourself at what time is it at x=0? What time at x = 6 cm?
The difference between the two times is your final answer.

I think what you're getting at is isolating t in each of x(t) = 0.00m and x(t) = 0.06m and finding the difference. However, this warrants a number (~23 seconds) that just doesn't make any sense given the period of 4 seconds.
 
I would use the x = 0.1*sin(πt/2).
Then at t = 0, x = 0.
At t = 1, x = 0.1 m or 10 cm.
So it will be at x = 6 cm sometime between 0 and 1 second. The motion is all in the same direction during this quarter of a period, so no up and down to worry about.

You could keep trying different times in that range until you get x = 0.06 or you could solve the equation for t and plug in x = .06.
 
Delphi51 said:
I would use the x = 0.1*sin(πt/2).
Then at t = 0, x = 0.
At t = 1, x = 0.1 m or 10 cm.
So it will be at x = 6 cm sometime between 0 and 1 second. The motion is all in the same direction during this quarter of a period, so no up and down to worry about.

You could keep trying different times in that range until you get x = 0.06 or you could solve the equation for t and plug in x = .06.

x = 0.1*sin(πt/2)
t = 2*asin(x/0.1)/π
t = 2*asin(0.06/0.1)/π
t = way too high.

Am I misinterpreting how to use this equation?
 
Ah, I see the problem. You were deceived by a little matter of units!
asin(x/0.1) = 36.9 degrees, which is 0.643 radians. t works out to about 0.4 seconds.
If you want to use degrees, then you must replace the π with 180 degrees in the formula.
 
Delphi51 said:
Ah, I see the problem. You were deceived by a little matter of units!
asin(x/0.1) = 36.9 degrees, which is 0.643 radians. t works out to about 0.4 seconds.
If you want to use degrees, then you must replace the π with 180 degrees in the formula.

UGH. Thank you. I'll try again.
 
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