Coupled oscillations of the Wilberforce pendulum unveiled by smartphones
Thomas Gallot, Daniel Gau, Rodrigo Garc\'ia-Tejera

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a smartphone equipped with accelerometer and gyroscope can effectively record and analyze coupled oscillations of a Wilberforce pendulum, making such experiments more accessible and affordable for educational settings.
Contribution
The study introduces a low-cost, smartphone-based experimental setup for observing coupled oscillations in the Wilberforce pendulum, simplifying data acquisition and analysis.
Findings
Smartphones can accurately record longitudinal and torsional oscillations.
The setup successfully captures normal modes and beat phenomena.
Experimental results align well with theoretical simulations.
Abstract
The Wilberforce pendulum is a great experience for illustrating important properties of coupled oscillatory systems, such as normal modes and beat phenomena, in physics courses. A helical spring attached to a mass comprises this simple but colorful device that features longitudinal and torsional oscillations, catching the eye of students and teachers, and offering a fantastic environment to study coupled oscillations at qualitative and quantitative levels. However, the experimental setups that are commonly used to simultaneously acquire both oscillation types can be cumbersome and/or costly, often requiring two synchronised cameras, or motion sensors and photo-gates integrated by an expensive analog-to-digital converter. Here, we show that a smartphone can be the perfect device for recording the oscillations of a Wilberforce pendulum composed of just an educational helical spring and a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental and Theoretical Physics Studies · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Experimental Learning in Engineering
