What is damping in Simple Harmonic Motion?

An oscillation is damped if resistive forces are present e.g. air resistance or friction.
The amplitude of the system will decrease over time, as opposed to a free oscillation which is undamped (no resistive forces) and will have a constant amplitude.
Light damping occurs when the resistive forces acting are small – many oscillations occur but the time period stays constant as the amplitude falls. E.g. simple pendulum in air.
Critical damping occurs when the system stops oscillating after the shortest possible time. E.g. A car suspension system
Heavy damping occurs when the resistive forces acting are large – not even one complete oscillation occurs as the system slowly returns to equilibrium. E.g. A push tap in a public toilet.

CD
Answered by Chris D. Physics tutor

28480 Views

See similar Physics A Level tutors

Related Physics A Level answers

All answers ▸

State Lenz's law and hence describe and explain what happens to a magnet travelling through a metal tube


how do i convert from a sine angle to a cosine angle?


describe how a microwave oven works (EM waves + thermal physics)


If the force between two point charges of charge 'Q1' and 'Q2' which are a distance 'r' apart is 'F' then what would the force be if the charge of 'Q1' is tripled and the distance between them doubled?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2026 by IXL Learning