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8.03x

Vibrations and Waves

About This Course

A foundational study of waves and vibrations will prepare learners for advanced courses in physics and related fields of engineering. The skills utilized in analyzing these phenomena are applicable to many different systems because vibrations and waves are so ubiquitous. For instance, learners will understand how the “resonant” modes of a tall building are analogous to simple systems of coupled oscillators. Moreover, learners will come to appreciate that the concept of “resonance” applies not only to systems of masses on springs, but to sound waves, 2D surfaces, atoms, and a wide range of other systems. This course explores many properties that are universal to all wave systems as well as many particular cases.

This course will prepare learners to analyze problems that involve mechanical vibrations and waves with such topics as simple harmonic motion, superposition, damping, forced vibrations and resonance, coupled oscillations, normal modes, continuous systems, reflection and refraction, and phase and group velocities. The course also explores electromagnetic waves and various associated properties like polarization, Snell’s law, Huygens’s principle, interference and diffraction. It ends by giving learners a taste of Quantum Mechanics.

What you'll learn

  • Simple Harmonic Motion
  • Driven vibrations and resonance
  • Vibrations of continuous systems
  • Properties of sound and electromagnetic waves
  • Polarization and polarizers
  • Waves at interfaces and in media
  • Interference phenomena

Course staff

Yen-Jie Lee

Yen-Jie Lee

Class of 1958 CD Associate Professor

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Alex Shvonski

Alex Shvonski

MITx Digital Learning Fellow, Physics

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Michelle Tomasik

Michelle Tomasik

Lecturer, Physics

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  1. Course Number:

    8.03x
  2. Classes Start:

  3. Classes End:

  4. Length:

    18 weeks
  5. Year Created:

    2021
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