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4—Differential Equations 79

The way to make use of this picture is to take a sequence of contiguous steps. One step follows
immediately after the preceding one. If two such impulses are two steps


F 0 =


{

F(t 0 ) (t 0 < t < t 1 )


0 (elsewhere) and F^1 =


{

F(t 1 ) (t 1 < t < t 2 )


0 (elsewhere)

m ̈x+kx=F 0 +F 1 (4.33)


then ifx 0 is the solution to Eq. (4.30) with only theF 0 on its right, andx 1 is the solution with only


F 1 , then the full solution to Eq. (4.33) is the sum,x 0 +x 1.


Think of a general forcing functionFx,ext(t) in the way that you would set up an integral.


Approximate it as a sequence of very short steps as in the picture. Betweentkandtk+1the force is


essentiallyF(tk). The response ofmto this piece of the total force is then Eq. (4.32).


xk(t) =


{F(t
k)∆tk
mω 0 sin

(

ω 0 (t−tk)


)

(t > tk)


0 (t≤tk)


where∆tk=tk+1−tk.


F


t 1 t 2 t^5


+ + + +

t


To complete this idea, the external force is the sum of a lot of terms, the force betweent 1 and


t 2 , that betweent 2 andt 3 etc. The total response is the sum of all these individual responses.


x(t) =



k

{F(t
k)∆tk
mω 0 sin

(

ω 0 (t−tk)


)

(t > tk)


0 (t≤tk)


For a specified timet, only the timestk before and up totcontribute to this sum. The impulses


occurring at the times after the timetcan’t change the value ofx(t); they haven’t happened yet. In


the limit that∆tk→ 0 , this sum becomes an integral.


x(t) =


∫t

−∞

dt′


F(t′)


mω 0


sin

(

ω 0 (t−t′)


)

(4.34)


Apply this to an example. The simplest is to start at rest and begin applying a constant force
from time zero on.


Fext(t) =


{

F 0 (t > 0 )


0 (t≤ 0 ) x(t) =


∫t

0

dt′


F 0


mω 0


sin

(

ω 0 (t−t′)


)

and the last expression applies only fort > 0. It is


x(t) =


F 0


mω^20


[

1 −cos(ω 0 t)


]

(4.35)

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