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Subject:
When treating driven harmonic oscillations, one usually emphasizes that
the resonance frequency is not exactly but only approximately equal to the
natural frequency of the oscillator.
Deficiencies:
What can we do with such a statement? Apparently nature was not able to
arrange oscillations reasonably. First we learn that there is resonance when
the oscillator is in time with the driving device. But then we are told that the
resonance frequency and the natural frequency of the oscillator do not
match exactly. Nature seems to spoil the game. Do we have to conclude
that the original idea is not correct? An uneasiness comes up.
The incongruity can easily be dismantled. Resonance means that the en-
ergy which the oscillator absorbs and dissipates as a function of the excita-
tion frequency has a maximum value. Since
P = v F0 ,
this maximum is located on the frequency axis at the same position as the
maximum of the velocity. (We assume that the oscillator is driven by a force
with a constant amplitude F0. Similar arguments hold when the driving is
realized with a constant velocity amplitude.) Now, the frequency that be-
longs to the maximum of the velocity amplitude is indeed the natural fre-
quency. As a consequence, the position amplitude cannot not have its
maximum at the natural frequency. Neither does the frequency of the ac-
celeration amplitude coincide with the natural frequency.
From
x(t ) = x 0 ( ) sin(t )
follows
) = x 0 ( ) cos(t ) = v 0 ( ) cos(t )
x(t
and
) = 2 x 0 ( ) sin(t ) = a0 ( ) sin(t )
x(t
Disposal:
Not define resonance by means of the positional amplitude, i.e. by the
manifest quantity. Resonance is when the absorbed energy has its maxi-
mum value.