This concept is the track start.
Also in Waves.
Concept module
See one repeating system from displacement to acceleration and back again, with the math tied directly to the motion on screen.
Interactive lab
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Progress
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Stable links
This concept is the track start.
Also in Waves.
Why it behaves this way
Simple harmonic motion is the cleanest place to see how a restoring effect creates repeating motion. The system keeps trying to return to equilibrium, but it overshoots, so the pattern loops instead of settling immediately.
In Open Model Lab, the goal is not to memorize a formula first. The simulation shows the object, the graph, and the derived quantities together so you can connect amplitude, phase, and angular frequency to what the system is actually doing.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans0 s
1.4 m
1.8 rad/s
0 rad
1. Identify the relation
2. Substitute the current values
3. Compute the phase angle
Current displacement
Common misconception
A larger amplitude means the object moves faster at every point.
Amplitude changes the size of the oscillation, but speed still depends on position within the cycle.
Near equilibrium the speed is greatest, while the turning points are where the speed drops to zero.
Mini challenge
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Quick test
Variable effect
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows a single oscillator moving back and forth across an equilibrium point. The object position, velocity direction, and acceleration direction are linked to the same motion so the relationship stays readable without needing to decode the graph alone.
When the user changes amplitude, angular frequency, or phase, the motion updates immediately and the graph follows the same cycle.
Graph summary
The graphs show displacement, velocity, acceleration, and energy as separate views of the same oscillation.
Each plot makes one part of the cycle obvious so the user can compare phase shifts, turning points, and equilibrium crossings.
Read next
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Watch kinetic and potential energy trade places in simple harmonic motion while the total stays fixed by amplitude and spring stiffness.
Superpose two coherent sources, trace their path difference to phase difference, and watch bright and dark regions emerge on the same live screen.
Track fixed nodes, moving antinodes, and harmonic mode shapes on one live string while the same probe trace shows the underlying oscillation in time.