Differential Equations and Linear Algebra, 2.4b: Second Order Equations With Damping
From the series: Differential Equations and Linear Algebra
Gilbert Strang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
A damped forced equation has a particular solution y = G cos(ωt – α). The damping ratio provides insight into the null solutions.
Published: 27 Jan 2016
I'm coming back to the number one example, but not the easiest example, of a second order equation with an oscillating forcing term, cosine omega t. We have to know the answer to this problem. And it's a little messy, but the method is not messy. The method is straightforward.
So let me begin by looking for the rectangular form. I call this the rectangular form. It separates the cosine with its amplitude and the sine with its amplitude into two separate pieces. So if I'm looking for that solution, and m and n are the numbers I want to find, how do I proceed?
It's a case of undetermined coefficients, M and N. And the way to determine them is substitute this into the equation and match the cosine term and find M and N. And the way we find M and N, we need two equations for two quantities, M and N.
And imagine this substituted in there. I'll get some cosines. So the cosines on one side will match the cosine on the other side. And also from the derivative, I'll get some sines and they should match 0 because I have no sine omega t on the right hand side.
So I have two equations, matching the sines, matching the cosines. And I solve those. Two equations, two unknowns. And I just write the answer down.
M involves a C minus omega squared. M is coming from the cosines. And we get cosines from that term and that term. Divided by some number, D, that I'll write down.
And N is just B omega divided by that same D. And now I'll write down D. That's C minus A omega squared squared plus B omega squared. This is what comes out from the two equations for M and N.
I just solve those equations. This D here is the two by two determinant if we think about the linear algebra behind two equations. And that's what it is. And so the answer now is in terms of A, C, B, and D, which is a mixture of all of A, B, and C. That's the solution.
Only I always want to show you a different form of the solution. And in this case, a better form. Because the most important physical quantity is the magnitude. How large does y get? What is the amplitude of this?
This is a sinusoid. And we remember that every sinusoid can be written in a polar form. Says that y of t is some amplitude of G, the gain, times a cosine of omega t with a shift, with a lag, with an angle alpha. So I have two numbers now.
That's the gain. And this is the phase shift alpha. And that's an attractive form because it has only one term. The two numbers, G and alpha, get put into a single term where we can see the magnitude of the oscillation.
And what does that come out to be? I won't go through all the steps. I'll just write down what G turns out to be. G turns out to be-- it comes from there-- and it's 1 over the square root of D. Well, G is the square root of M squared plus N squared.
The square root of M squared plus N squared. And if I put M squared and N squared, then I have D over D squared. I get that answer. That's the gain.
Let me write that word, gain, again. Because you got it there. Here it is again. And as always, the tangent of alpha is the N over the M, which is just B omega over C minus A omega squared. I like that polar form.
And I feel I should just do an example. I didn't do any of the algebra in this video. But you know where the algebra came from. It came from substituting the form we expect for the solution. And of course, that form that we expect is the form we get provided omega, the driving frequency, is different from omega N.
Well, no. I guess we're all right even if omega is omega N, because we have a damping term. So that's the answer.
So an example. Why not an example? y double prime plus y prime plus 2y equals cosine of t. That's a simple example. I took omega to be 1, you see. And there is omega. And then A is 1, B is 1, C is 2.
We can evaluate everything. In fact, I think M and N are 1/2. D, by the way, will be 1 squared plus 1 squared. That's 2 square root. Sorry. D will be 2. 1 squared plus 1 squared.
So what do I know? Do I know the rectangular form? Yes. Rectangular form is 1/2. 1/2 for both the cosine and the sine. 1/2 of cosine t plus sine t. That's the rectangular form.
Two simple things, but I have to add them. And in my mind, I don't necessarily see how the cosine adds to the sine. But the sinusoidal identity, the polar form, gives it to me. So what is it in polar form?
So G, the gain, is going to be 1 over the square root of 2. At the highest point, the cosine and the sine are the same. They're both 1 over the square root of 2. I have two of them. So I get 1 over the square root of 2 cosine of t minus pi over 4 is the angle, the phase lag.
When I add the cosine and the sine, I get a sinusoid that's sitting over pi over 4, 45 degrees. So those are the two forms. So in a nice example, we certainly got a nice answer. We certainly did. Yes.
So that is the-- worked out, more or less worked out, in principle, worked out-- is the solution to what I think of as the most important application when the forcing term is a cosine. So it gives oscillating motion. It gives a phase shift. And it gives these formulas.
The only thing I would add is that I need to comment on better notation. So I have used in these formulas A, B, and C. But those have meaning as mass, damping constant, spring constant. M, B, and K.
And it's combinations of those that come in. So let me just take this moment to say better notation. Or maybe I should say engineering notation instead of A, B, C, which are mass, damping, spring constant.
Well, that's already better to use letters that have a meaning. But the small but very important point is that two combinations of A, B, C, M, B, K are especially good. One is the natural frequency that we've seen already, square root of C over A.
Square root of K over M. So that gives us one important combination of A and C. And the other one is the damping ratio. And it's called zeta. And that damping ratio is B over the square root of 4ac.
Ha! You'll say, where does that come from? Or I can use these letters, B over the square root of 4mk. That damping ratio is, so to speak, it's the right dimensionless quantity. The dimensions of this ratio are just numbers.
Those two quantities have the same dimension. And we can see that because in the quadratic formula comes-- you remember that in a quadratic formula comes the square root of b squared minus 4ac? Now if you see a formula that has b squared minus 4ac in it, you know that these must have the same units.
Otherwise, subtraction would be a crime. So they have the same ratio and the same units and therefore the ratio is dimensionless. Let me write that word. Dimensionless.
So conclusion. I could rewrite the answer in terms of these quantities omega n and zeta. I won't do that here. That can wait for another time.
But just to say since we've found a solution to the most important application with cosine omega t there, since we found the solution, appropriate to comment that we could write the answer in terms of omega n, the natural frequency, and z, zeta, the damping ratio. Thank you.
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