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Natural Frequency of beams is something

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A ree vibrations of an elastic body are called natural vibrations and occur at a
frequency called the natural frequency. Natural vibrations are different from
forced vibrations which happen at the frequency of an applied force (forced
frequency). If the forced frequency is equal to the natural frequency, the
vibrations' amplitude increases manyfold. This phenomenon is known as
resonance.[2]

In a mass-spring system, with mass m and spring stiffness k, the natural


frequency can be calculated as:

{\displaystyle \omega _{0}={\sqrt {\frac {k}{m}}}}{\displaystyle \omega


_{0}={\sqrt {\frac {k}{m}}}}
In electrical circuits, s1 is a natural frequency of variable x if the zero-input
response of x includes the term {\displaystyle K_{1}e^{-s_{1}t}}K_{1}e^{{-
s_{1}t}}, where {\displaystyle K_{1}\neq 0}K_{1}\neq 0 is a constant dependent
on initial state of the circuit, network topology, and element values.[3] In a
network, sk is a natural frequency of the network if it is a natural frequency of
some voltage or current in the network.[4] Natural frequencies depend only on
network topology and element values but not the input.[5] It can be shown that
the set of natural frequencies in a network can be obtained by calculating the
poles of all impedance and admittance functions of the network.[6] All poles of
the network transfer function are also natural frequencies of the corresponding
response variable; however there may exist some natural frequencies that are
not a pole of the network function. These frequencies happen at some special
initial states.[7]

In LC and RLC circuits, the natural frequency of a circuit can be calculated as:[8]

{\displaystyle \omega _{0}={\frac {1}{\sqrt {LC}}}}\omega _{0}={\frac {1}


{{\sqrt {LC}}}}

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