1. For energy conserving motion with one degree
of freedom, we can get the equation
of motion just by requiring energy conservation. For example, if
E = 1/2 m (dx/dt)^2 + V(x), then dE/dt = [m (d^2 x/dt^2) + dV/dx] dx/dt.
As long as dx/dt is not zero, this imples Newton's law ma = -
dV/dx.
2. Using the above, we can relate all harmonic oscillators with one
degree of freedom.
If the coordinate labelling that degree of freedom is called Q (for
example,
the x-coordinate of a particle, the height of a column of water, the
angle of a
physical pendulum, etc.), and the kinetic and potential energies take
the form
K = 1/2 A (dQ/dt)^2 and V(Q) = 1/2 B Q^2, then the motion is harmonic,
with angular frequency the square root of B/A.
3. Small motions about an equilibrium configuration are approximately
harmonic.
The reason is Taylor's theorem: For any potential V(x), the force vanishes
at any x_e where
V'(x_e)=0. That is called an equilibrium point. Making a Taylor expansion
of V(x)
about x_e we have V(x) = V(x_e) + 1/2 V''(x_e) (x - x_e)^2 + 1/3! V'''(x_e)
(x - x_e)^2 + ...
The constant piece produces no force, and the next nonzero piece has
the harmonic oscillator
form, with spring constant k = V''(x_e). For motions with small enough
amplitude, the
rest of the terms are negligible, so we have an approximate harmonic
oscillator.
4. Multiplication by the imaginary number i is equivalent to counterclockwise
rotation
though Pi/2 radians in the complex plane. More generally, multiplication
by e^is
is equivalent to counterclockwise rotation though s radians.