Introduction to simple harmonic motion review (article) | Khan Academy
Overview of key terms, equations, and skills for simple harmonic motion, including how to analyze the force, displacement, velocity, and acceleration of an oscillator.
Overview

Added
March 18, 2026
Subject & domain
physics · oscillations-simple-harmonic-motion
Grade range
Grade 9 (Freshman)–Grade 12 (Senior)
Page kind
Article
Introduction
Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM) Overview
- Oscillatory Motion: Defined as repeated back-and-forth movement over the same path around an equilibrium position (e.g., pendulums or mass on a spring).
- Restoring Force: A force that acts in opposition to displacement to return a system to its equilibrium position. Its magnitude is dependent on displacement (e.g., Hooke’s Law).
- Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM): A specific type of oscillatory motion where the net force acting on the system is a restoring force.
- Key Mathematical Concepts:
- Spring force magnitude is directly proportional to the spring constant and displacement.
- Displacement as a function of time is proportional to amplitude and the cosine of the phase.
- Core Analytical Topics:
- Relationships between force, displacement, velocity, and acceleration.
- Interpretation of period and frequency graphs.
- Conceptual Takeaways:
- At maximum displacement (where velocity is zero), the restoring force is at its maximum, not zero.
- SHM systems are often analyzed using position-time, velocity-time, and acceleration-time graphs.
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