What happens to the c2sin(t) part of the worked solution?

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    Damped Oscillator
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the role of the term c2sin(t) in the solution to the damped oscillation equation. The solution provided is x(t) = e^(-2t)(c1cos(t) + c2sin(t)), and the question arises about the significance of the sine component. It is clarified that sine and cosine functions are phase-shifted versions of each other, and the sine term can be expressed in terms of a phase constant φ. The conversation highlights that the sine function's contribution can be represented through trigonometric identities, emphasizing the relationship between the two functions in the context of the solution. Understanding this relationship is crucial for interpreting the complete solution to the equation of motion.
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Homework Statement
Why does the final solution of the equation of motion for damped oscillation not have a sine function?
Relevant Equations
$$x(t)=Ae^{-bt/2m} cos⁡(ωt+φ)$$
Hello folks,

So the solution of the equation of motion for damped oscillation is as stated above. If we were to take an specific example such as:

$$\frac{d^2x}{dt^2}+4\frac{dx}{dt}+5x=0$$

then the worked solution to the second order homogeneous is:

$$x\left(t\right)=e^{-2t}\left(c_1cos(t)+c_2sin(t)\right)$$

What happens to the $$c_2sin(t)$$ part of the worked soution? Why is it not part of the actual solution of the equation of motion?

Or does the sine function give the phase constant phi?
 
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Aha, so:

{\displaystyle a\cos x+b\sin x=c\cos(x+\varphi )}


I didn't know this!
 
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StillAnotherDave said:
Aha, so:

{\displaystyle a\cos x+b\sin x=c\cos(x+\varphi )}


I didn't know this!
Your question was mostly trigonometry than physics. In the identity you give above it is $$c={\sqrt{a^2+b^2}}$$ and ##\phi## an angle such that $$\cos\phi=\frac{a}{\sqrt{a^2+b^2}},\sin\phi=\frac{b}{\sqrt{a^2+b^2}}$$
 
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