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The Mechanical Universe

Harmonic Motion. The music and the mathematics of nature. The restoring force and inertia of any stable mechanical system cause objects to execute simple harmonic motion, a phenomenon that repeats itself in perfect time. That is why even a broken clock can be considered a simple harmonic system. (from themechanicaluniverse.org)

Lecture 16 - Harmonic Motion


Go to The Mechanical Universe Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Introduction
Lecture 02 - The Law of Falling Bodies
Lecture 03 - Derivatives
Lecture 04 - Inertia
Lecture 05 - Vectors
Lecture 06 - Newton's Laws
Lecture 07 - Integration
Lecture 08 - The Apple and the Moon
Lecture 09 - Moving in Circles
Lecture 10 - Fundamental Forces
Lecture 11 - Gravity, Electricity, Magnetism
Lecture 12 - The Millikan Experiment
Lecture 13 - Conservation of Energy
Lecture 14 - Potential Energy
Lecture 15 - Conservation of Momentum
Lecture 16 - Harmonic Motion
Lecture 17 - Resonance
Lecture 18 - Waves
Lecture 19 - Angular Momentum
Lecture 20 - Torques and Gyroscopes
Lecture 21 - Kepler's Three Laws
Lecture 22 - The Kepler Problem
Lecture 23 - Energy and Eccentricity
Lecture 24 - Navigating in Space
Lecture 25 - From Kepler to Einstein
Lecture 26 - Harmony of the Spheres
Lecture 27 - Beyond the Mechanical Universe
Lecture 28 - Static Electricity
Lecture 29 - The Electric Field
Lecture 30 - Potential and Capacitance
Lecture 31 - Voltage, Energy, and Force
Lecture 32 - The Electric Battery
Lecture 33 - Electric Circuits
Lecture 34 - Magnetism
Lecture 35 - The Magnetic Field
Lecture 36 - Vector Fields and Hydrodynamics
Lecture 37 - Electromagnetic Induction
Lecture 38 - Alternating Currents
Lecture 39 - Maxwell's Equations
Lecture 40 - Optics
Lecture 41 - The Michelson Morley Experiment
Lecture 42 - The Lorentz Transformation
Lecture 43 - Velocity and Time
Lecture 44 - Energy, Momentum, Mass
Lecture 45 - Temperature and the Gas Laws
Lecture 46 - The Engine of Nature
Lecture 47 - Entropy
Lecture 48 - Low Temperatures
Lecture 49 - The Atom
Lecture 50 - Particles and Waves
Lecture 51 - From Atoms to Quarks
Lecture 52 - The Quantum Mechanical Universe