Starter track
Step 3 of 30 / 3 completeOscillations and Energy
Earlier steps still set up Damping / Resonance.
Previous step: Oscillation Energy.
Concept module
Explore how damping removes energy, how driving frequency changes amplitude, and why resonance becomes dramatic near the natural frequency.
Interactive lab
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Starter track
Step 3 of 30 / 3 completeEarlier steps still set up Damping / Resonance.
Previous step: Oscillation Energy.
Why it behaves this way
Damping and resonance are the two forces that make oscillators feel realistic. Damping drains motion away, while a driver can keep feeding energy into the system and build a larger response.
This module keeps both stories visible. In one mode you watch the motion fade. In the other you sweep driving frequency and see the response rise and fall around resonance.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans0 s
0.12
2 rad/s
1.85 rad/s
1. Identify the current-mode relation
2. Substitute the current values
3. Compute the displacement
Current displacement
Common misconception
Resonance always means an unlimited amplitude spike.
Real systems lose energy, so damping keeps the amplitude finite.
The exact shape of the peak depends on how strongly the system is damped.
Mini challenge
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Quick test
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Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation alternates between two views of the same system: a time-based damped motion and a frequency-response view that sweeps the driver across different frequencies.
The controls make the physical meaning explicit so the user can tell whether they are changing damping, the natural frequency, or the strength and rate of the external driver.
Graph summary
The transient graph shows how quickly the motion settles after energy is removed by damping.
The response graph shows how close the driver is to resonance and how damping changes the shape of the peak.
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