πŸŽ“ mecademyAI β€Ί General Physics 1 β€Ί Oscillatory Motion β€Ί Problem 30
Physics for Scientists and Engineers 10th Edition Β· Oscillatory Motion Β· Problem 30
βœ… Verified Step-by-Step πŸŽ“ Engineering Expert Reviewed πŸ“ LaTeX Math Rendering

Serway & Jewett β€” Oscillatory Motion: Problem 30

You take on a research assistantship with a molecular physicist. She is studying the vibrations of diatomic molecules. In these vibrations, the two atoms in the molecule move back and forth along the line connecting them (see Figure 20.5c). As an introduction to her research, she asks you to familiarize yourself with the Lennard–Jones potential (see Example 7.9), which describes the potential energy function for a diatomic molecule. She asks you to determine the effective spring constant, in terms of the parameters \(\sigma\) and \(\epsilon\), for the bond holding the atoms together in the molecule for small vibrations around the equilibrium separation \(r_{eq}\). After being stumped for a while, you ask her for a hint. She responds, β€œExample 7.9 provides the derivative of the potential energy function. Compare that to Equation 7.29 to find the force between the atoms. You want to show that F is of the form \(-kx\), and find \(k\). Let the separation distance \(r = r_{eq} + x\), where \(x\) is small and take advantage of the series approximations in Appendix Section B.5.” Wow, that’s several hints! You sit down and get to work.

πŸ“ Solution Approach

Given: . In, , in

This problem covers key concepts in Oscillatory Motion from Physics for Scientists and Engineers 10th Edition by Serway & Jewett. The step-by-step solution involves applying fundamental principles and systematic analysis to arrive at the correct answer. Full solution available with a Solution Pass.

πŸ“– View Solution

Step-by-step solution requires a Solution Pass

View Solution β†’
πŸ’‘ Problems 1–5 of each chapter are free with login

πŸ“˜ About This Textbook

Physics for Scientists and Engineers Β· 10th Edition
Author: Serway & Jewett
Publisher: Cengage
Chapter: Oscillatory Motion