silent10
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Which of the following is not essential for SHM?
a) restoring force
b) gravity
c) elasticity
d) inertia
a) restoring force
b) gravity
c) elasticity
d) inertia
What do you think and why?silent10 said:Which of the following is not essential for SHM?
a) restoring force
b) gravity
c) elasticity
d) inertia
gneill said:Where's the elasticity in a pendulum?![]()
phinds said:That's beside the point. The question was which of these can you omit and still HAVE SHM, not "are there any of these that would break SLM in SOME cases".
Good point, gneill. (You devil, you!gneill said:Where's the elasticity in a pendulum?![]()
Evaluate each choice by asking: Is it possible to have SHM without this?silent10 said:So its elasticity for a simple pendulum and gravity for a horizontal spring system.![]()
ehild said:Pendulum motion is not really shm, but there are cases for shm where elasticity is not essential.
ehild
ardie said:inertia is not required for SHM because light is the most important case of SHM and it has no inertia.
ardie said::O
you sure u didnt just have a really bad day or one of ur friends died or something?
I like Serena said:Edit: I think answer (c) should be: elasticity-like force, since that is required and not contained in the other answers.
ehild said:What do you mean on elasticity-like force? A restoring one?
ehild
I like Serena said:No, a linear one. :)
As opposed to for instance an inverse square one.
gneill said:For small angular displacements the motion of a pendulum approximates very closely to SHM,
I certainly think so.Redbelly98 said:Is it possible to have more than one correct answer here?
Redbelly98 said:A real spring & mass is also just an approximation to SHM.
Is it possible to have more than one correct answer here?
gneill said:The question is, "which is not essential for SHM". Do pendulums exhibit SHM? Is there elasticity in the pendulum system? If your answers are "yes" and "no" respectively, then elasticity is not essential for SHM.