Oscillations
When a system is disturbed from its "Resting State" and tries to go back, it often overshoots, creating Harmonic Motion. This is the physical version of a sine wave.
The Period of a Pendulum
For small angles, the time it takes for a pendulum to swing back and forth depends only on its length (\(L\)) and gravity (\(g\)).
\[T = 2\pi \sqrt{\frac{L}{g}}\]
Worked Examples
Example 1: Calculating Period
Find the period of a 1-meter pendulum on Earth (\(g = 9.8\)).
- \(T = 2\pi \sqrt{1/9.8} \approx 2\pi (0.32) \approx 2.0\) seconds.
Example 2: Changing Length
What happens to the period if you make the pendulum 4 times longer?
- The length is inside a square root. \(\sqrt{4} = 2\).
- Result: The period doubles.
The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics
In Quantum Mechanics, the "Pendulum" is an analogy for an electron trapped in a potential well. Just as a pendulum can't have "zero" motion (it would just be sitting there), a quantum particle always has a tiny bit of "Zero-Point Energy." The formula for the energy levels of a quantum oscillator (\(E = \hbar\omega(n + 1/2)\)) is derived directly from the mathematics of this pendulum. The "swinging" of a pendulum is the macro-scale version of the "vibrating" of an atom.