Simple Harmonic Motion
Specification: OCR A H556 | Section: 5.3.1 & 5.3.2 | Teaching time: ~6 hours
- Define displacement, amplitude, period, frequency, angular frequency and phase difference for oscillations
- Use the defining condition of SHM: acceleration is proportional to displacement from equilibrium and directed towards it
- Apply the equations x = A cos(ωt), x = A sin(ωt), v = ±ω√(A² − x²) and v_max = ωA
- Describe and sketch the relationship between displacement, velocity and acceleration graphs
- Explain energy interchange between kinetic and potential energy during SHM, including energy–displacement graphs
Oscillations and the Defining Condition of SHM
An oscillation is any motion that repeats itself about a central equilibrium position. Think of a pendulum swinging, a mass bouncing on a spring, or a guitar string vibrating. Before defining SHM, we need the vocabulary.
Oscillation Terminology
- Displacement x — distance from the equilibrium position (positive or negative)
- Amplitude A — maximum displacement from equilibrium
- Period T — time for one complete oscillation (s)
- Frequency f — number of oscillations per unit time (Hz = s⁻¹)
- Angular frequency ω — rate of change of phase (rad s⁻¹)
- Phase difference — fraction of a cycle by which one oscillation leads or lags another, measured in radians or degrees
The Defining Condition
Motion is simple harmonic if and only if the acceleration is:
- Proportional to the displacement from equilibrium, and
- Directed towards the equilibrium position.
The minus sign is crucial — it guarantees the restoring force always pushes the object back towards equilibrium. When displacement is positive, acceleration is negative; when displacement is negative, acceleration is positive.
To prove a system undergoes SHM, start from Newton's second law and show that the resulting acceleration has the form a = −ω²x. You must identify what ω represents for that specific system (e.g. ω = √(k/m) for a mass–spring system).
Examples of SHM
Any system where the restoring force obeys Hooke's law produces SHM (for small oscillations):
- Mass on a spring — restoring force F = −kx, so a = −(k/m)x giving ω² = k/m
- Simple pendulum (small angles) — restoring force F ≈ −(mg/L)x giving ω² = g/L
- Atoms in a crystal lattice — interatomic forces approximate SHM for small vibrations
- Buoyancy oscillator — a floating object bobbing up and down
Figure 1 — Mass–spring system. The restoring force F always acts towards the equilibrium position. Amplitude A is the maximum displacement in either direction.
Knowledge Check
- ω = 2πf ✓
- ω = 2π × 2.5 = 5π ≈ 15.7 rad s⁻¹ ✓
- Acceleration (or restoring force) is proportional to displacement from equilibrium ✓
- Acceleration (or restoring force) is always directed towards the equilibrium position ✓
- f = 1/T = 1/1.8 = 0.556 Hz ✓
- ω = 2π/T = 2π/1.8 ✓
- ω = 3.49 rad s⁻¹ ✓
Displacement, Velocity and Acceleration
Solutions to a = −ω²x
Solving the defining equation gives us two standard forms for displacement as a function of time:
Which form you use depends on the initial conditions:
- x = A cos(ωt) — object starts at maximum displacement (+A) at t = 0
- x = A sin(ωt) — object passes through equilibrium (x = 0) at t = 0
The general form with a phase constant is x = A sin(ωt + φ), where φ accounts for the starting position.
Velocity
Differentiating displacement with respect to time gives velocity:
Starting from x = A cos(ωt):
v = dx/dt = −Aω sin(ωt)
Using sin²θ + cos²θ = 1: sin(ωt) = √(1 − cos²(ωt)) = √(1 − x²/A²)
So v = ±Aω × √(1 − x²/A²) = ±ω√(A² − x²)
The ± sign reflects that the object moves in both directions. Maximum speed occurs at the equilibrium position (x = 0) where v = ωA. The object is momentarily stationary at x = ±A (the turning points).
Acceleration
Differentiating again gives acceleration:
Maximum acceleration occurs at the turning points (x = ±A) where a = ∓ω²A. At the equilibrium position (x = 0), acceleration is zero.
Maximum velocity and maximum acceleration happen at different points in the cycle. v is maximum at x = 0; a is maximum at x = ±A. Don't confuse them in exam questions.
Figure 2 — Displacement, velocity and acceleration graphs for SHM on a shared time axis. Velocity leads displacement by π/2; acceleration is in antiphase (π) with displacement.
Knowledge Check
- a_max = ω²A ✓
- a_max = (5.0)² × 0.15 = 25 × 0.15 = 3.75 m s⁻² ✓
- v = ½v_max → ω√(A² − x²) = ½ωA ✓
- √(A² − x²) = A/2 → A² − x² = A²/4 ✓
- x² = 3A²/4 → x = ±A√3/2 = ±0.866A ✓
- Velocity leads displacement by 90° (π/2 rad) ✓
- Acceleration is 180° (π rad) out of phase with displacement (antiphase) ✓
- All three graphs have the same period / frequency ✓
Energy of a Simple Harmonic Oscillator
Throughout SHM, energy is continuously exchanged between kinetic energy (Ek) and potential energy (Ep), while the total energy remains constant (assuming no damping).
Kinetic and Potential Energy
Energy at Key Positions
| Position | Ek | Ep | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| x = 0 (equilibrium) | Maximum | Zero | vmax = ωA |
| x = ±A (turning points) | Zero | Maximum | Zero |
The total energy ½mω²A² is always constant for an undamped SHM system. This is a direct consequence of the restoring force being conservative. If you see total energy changing in a calculation, something is wrong.
Figure 3 — Energy–displacement graphs for SHM. Ek + Ep = Etotal at all displacements. Ek is maximum at x = 0; Ep is maximum at x = ±A.
SHM Oscillator Simulation
Isochronous Oscillators and Practical Methods
Isochronous Oscillators
A key feature of SHM is that the period is independent of amplitude. This property is called isochronous oscillation. A pendulum clock keeps good time whether it swings in a small arc or a slightly larger one (provided the small-angle approximation holds).
The isochronous property breaks down for large amplitude oscillations. A simple pendulum is only approximately SHM for angles below about 10°. For a mass–spring system, the period is truly independent of amplitude as long as the spring obeys Hooke's law.
Determining the Period Experimentally (PAG10)
To measure the period of SHM accurately:
- Set up the oscillating system (mass on a spring or simple pendulum)
- Displace the mass by a small amount and release from rest
- Use a fiducial marker at the equilibrium position to improve timing accuracy
- Time multiple oscillations (typically 10–20) and divide by the number of oscillations
- Repeat for different amplitudes to confirm the period is independent of amplitude (isochronous)
Always measure the time for at least 10 complete oscillations, then divide. This reduces the percentage uncertainty in the timing measurement. The random uncertainty in T is the uncertainty in the total time divided by the number of oscillations.
Period Formulas
Notice that for a mass–spring system, T depends on mass but not on g — so the period would be the same on the Moon. For a pendulum, T depends on g but not on mass.
Exam-Style Questions
(a) Calculate the angular frequency of the oscillation.
(b) Calculate the maximum speed of the mass.
(c) Calculate the speed of the mass when its displacement is 0.040 m.
- (a) E_total = ½mω²A² → 0.50 = ½ × 0.25 × ω² × 0.080² ✓
- 0.50 = 0.125 × ω² × 0.0064 = 8.0 × 10⁻⁴ × ω² ✓
- ω² = 0.50 / (8.0 × 10⁻⁴) = 625 → ω = 25 rad s⁻¹ ✓
- (b) v_max = ωA = 25 × 0.080 = 2.0 m s⁻¹ ✓
- (c) v = ω√(A² − x²) = 25 × √(0.080² − 0.040²) = 25 × √(0.0048) = 25 × 0.0693 = 1.73 m s⁻¹ ✓
(a) Calculate the period and hence a value for the acceleration of free fall g.
(b) The student repeats the experiment with a larger amplitude. Explain whether the value of g obtained would be different.
- (a) T = 44.2/20 = 2.21 s ✓
- T = 2π√(L/g) → T² = 4π²L/g ✓
- g = 4π²L/T² = 4π² × 1.20 / 2.21² ✓
- g = 47.37 / 4.884 = 9.70 m s⁻² ✓
- (b) For larger amplitudes, the small-angle approximation breaks down — the restoring force is no longer proportional to displacement ✓
- The period increases slightly for larger amplitudes, so the calculated g would be smaller than the true value ✓
(a) Calculate the angular frequency of the oscillation.
(b) Calculate the amplitude of the oscillation.
- (a) a = ω²x → ω² = a/x = 4.5/0.030 = 150 ✓
- ω = √150 = 12.2 rad s⁻¹ ✓
- (b) v² = ω²(A² − x²) → 0.45² = 150(A² − 0.030²) ✓
- 0.2025 = 150A² − 0.135 → 150A² = 0.3375 → A² = 0.00225 → A = 0.0474 m ✓
Extended Response (6 marks)
Describe the energy changes that take place during one complete oscillation of the mass. In your answer, you should:
• describe how the kinetic energy and potential energy change
• explain what happens to the total energy
• refer to the motion of the mass at specific points in the cycle
[6 marks, QWC]
- At maximum displacement (the turning points), the mass is momentarily at rest — its kinetic energy is zero and its potential energy is at a maximum ✓
- As the mass moves towards the equilibrium position, the potential energy decreases and the kinetic energy increases ✓
- At the equilibrium position, the mass is moving at its maximum speed — kinetic energy is at a maximum and potential energy is zero ✓
- The mass continues through equilibrium, losing kinetic energy and gaining potential energy as it moves towards the opposite turning point ✓
- Throughout the oscillation, the total energy (kinetic + potential) remains constant (assuming no damping) ✓
- Energy is continuously transferred between kinetic and potential forms — this is a characteristic feature of SHM ✓
Topic Summary
Defining Condition
SHM occurs when acceleration is proportional to displacement and directed towards equilibrium: a = −ω²x.
Key Quantities
ω = 2πf = 2π/T. v_max = ωA at x = 0. a_max = ω²A at x = ±A.
Energy
Total energy ½mω²A² is constant. E_k and E_p interchange continuously throughout each cycle.
Isochronous
Period is independent of amplitude (for true SHM). Mass–spring: T = 2π√(m/k). Pendulum: T = 2π√(L/g).