Some differential equations have solutions with sines and cosines, which describe oscillating behaviour. Simple harmonic motion is described by a purely sinusoidal solution, and can be applied to many physical situations.
The differential equation for simple harmonic motion is:
Where
The general solution can also be written as:
Where
For certain cases, the solution is simplified as either the
There are some useful definitions for simple harmonic motion:
The period and angular frequency are related, as the motion repeats when
The object has maximum speed as it goes through the equilibrium position. The object is instantaneously at rest when at maximum displacement from the equilibrium position.
For a object with simple harmonic motion with amplitude
Proof of the above result:
Objects often move against a resistive force, e.g. air resistance or water resistance. One way to account for these forces is to model them as proportional to the speed, acting against the motion:
Where
By applying
This is called damped simple harmonic motion. The solutions to this differential equation depend on the discriminant of the auxiliary equation, from Differential Equations.
The cases are:
Systems of coupled differential equations can describe model situations such as predator-prey models, where the rate of change of each independent variable is related to the other variable. For linear systems with first-order equations, these can be solved by eliminating variables to form a second-order differential equation in one variable and solving using standard methods.