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periodic motion

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periodic motion

Motion that is repeated in equal intervals of time. The time of each interval is the period. Examples of periodic motion include a rocking chair, a bouncing ball, a vibrating guitar string, a swinging pendulum, and a water wave. See also simple harmonic motion.


periodic motion [¦pir·ē¦äd·ik ′mō·shən]
(mechanics)
Any motion that repeats itself identically at regular intervals.

Periodic motion

Any motion that repeats itself identically at regular intervals. If x(t) represents the displacement of any coordinate of the system at time t, a periodic motion has the property defined by the equation below for every value of

the variable time t. The fixed time interval T between repetitions, or the duration of a cycle, is known as the period of the motion.

The motion of the escapement mechanism of a watch, the motion of the Earth about the Sun, and the more complicated motion of the crankshaft, piston rods, and pistons in an engine running at uniform speed are all examples of periodic motion.

The vibration of a piano string after it is struck is a damped periodic motion, not strictly periodic according to the definition. Although the motion very nearly repeats itself, and with a fixed repetition time, each successive cycle has a slightly smaller amplitude. See Damping, Harmonic motion, Vibration, Wave motion



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Using spectroscopy to analyze shifts in wavelength over time, astronomers can look for periodic motion suggestive of an unseen planet.
Heller, now at Harvard University, argued on theoretical grounds that quantum particles in such a geometry would have eigenfunctions that retain some of the wave patterns associated with regular, periodic motion.
Taking advantage of a chaotic system's extreme sensitivity to initial conditions, they use a series of tiny, judiciously chosen and carefully applied perturbations to maneuver its behavior into the type of periodic motion desired.
 
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