Simple Harmonic Motion
Overview
Simple harmonic motion (SHM) is the most important ideal model of oscillatory motion. It describes motion in which the restoring effect causes acceleration toward equilibrium, with magnitude proportional to displacement from equilibrium.
Many physical systems approximate SHM for small displacements, including spring-mass systems, simple pendulums at small angles, vibrating molecules, tuning forks, and electrical oscillators.
Definition
A particle executes simple harmonic motion when its acceleration is:
- directly proportional to its displacement from equilibrium;
- always directed toward equilibrium.
Vector form:
In one-dimensional signed-component form, after choosing a positive direction:
where is the signed displacement component from equilibrium, is the signed acceleration component, and is the scalar angular frequency.
Why It Matters
SHM is fundamental because it produces sinusoidal motion and forms the basis of wave theory, resonance, and many advanced topics in physics. It also gives a clean way to connect force, motion, phase, and energy.
The central modelling test is whether the restoring acceleration or restoring force is proportional to displacement and directed back toward equilibrium.
Key Representations
Why SHM Occurs
SHM arises when the restoring force is proportional to displacement. If:
then by Newton’s second law:
so:
Comparing with gives:
This is why ideal springs naturally produce SHM.
Displacement, Velocity, and Acceleration
The displacement can be written as:
or:
where is amplitude and is phase constant.
If:
then:
Here is the signed velocity component. The speed is .
Maximum speed:
Acceleration is:
Maximum acceleration magnitude:
Time Quantities
Period:
Frequency:
Therefore:
Graphical Behaviour
The displacement-time graph is sinusoidal. The velocity-time graph is also sinusoidal and shifted by relative to displacement. The acceleration-time graph is sinusoidal and in antiphase with displacement.
The acceleration-displacement graph is a straight line:
with gradient:
This is a common test for SHM.
Phase Relationships
If:
then:
Velocity leads displacement by:
Acceleration is:
so acceleration is in antiphase with displacement. See Phase Difference.
Velocity-Displacement Relation
Eliminating time:
Hence:
This is useful when time is not given.
Energy in SHM
For ideal SHM, total mechanical energy remains constant:
Kinetic energy:
Potential energy:
Total energy:
Speed and kinetic energy are maximum at equilibrium. Acceleration magnitude and potential energy are maximum at turning points.
Physical Examples
For a spring-mass system:
For a simple pendulum at small angle:
See Pendulum Motion for the pendulum assumptions and derivation.
Circular Motion Interpretation
SHM can be viewed as the projection of uniform circular motion onto one diameter. If a particle moves in a circle of radius with angular velocity vector , then and projected motion is:
Thus amplitude corresponds to radius, and angular frequency is the same as the circular motion.
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting the negative sign in .
- Confusing amplitude with instantaneous displacement.
- Assuming all oscillations are SHM.
- Forgetting velocity is zero at turning points.
- Using the pendulum SHM formula at large angles.
Links
- Main topic: Oscillations and Simple Harmonic Motion
- Related concept: Phase Difference
- Related concept: Pendulum Motion
- Related concept: Damping and Resonance
- Related topic: Circular Motion