Harmonic oscillator
Introduction
A harmonic oscillator is any physical system that varies above and below its mean value with a characteristic frequency, f. Common examples of harmonic oscillators include pendulums, masses on springs, and RLC circuits.
The following article discusses the harmonic oscillator in terms of classical mechanics. See the article quantum harmonic oscillator for a discussion of the harmonic oscillator in quantum mechanics.
Full Mathematical Definition
Most harmonic oscillators, at least approximately, solve the differential equation:
Simple Harmonic Oscillator
A simple harmonic oscillator is simply an oscillator that is neither damped nor driven. So the equation to describe one is:
In the case of a mass hanging on a spring, Newton's Laws, combined with Hooke's law for the behavior of a spring, states that:
Driven Harmonic Oscillator
Satisfies equation:
AC LC circuit.
a few notes about what the response of the circuit to different AC frequencies.
Damped Harmonic Oscillator
Satisfies equation:
weighted spring underwater
Note well: underdamped, critically damped
Damped, Driven Harmonic Oscillator
equation:
Notes for above apply, transient vs steady state response, and quality factor.
A Final Note on Mathematics
For a more complete description of how to solve the above equation, see the article on Differential equations.
