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Earthquakes in the laboratory

Demonstration

Buildings in earthquake zones need to be designed with modes of vibration and resonance in mind.

Apparatus and materials

Technical notes

For construction details of the earthquake table see apparatus entry.

Safety

Hammerite paints use xylene as the solvent. When painting just one earthquake table, work in a well-ventilated area, e.g. close to an open window. If more than one table is painted on the same day, work out-of-doors.

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Procedure

a Students design and build their own tower structures for testing, preferably tall and flimsy. Mount the tower on the earthquake table.
 
b Set the signal generator at a low frequency (a few Hz) and observe the resulting vibrations of the tower as the frequency is gradually increased.


Teaching notes

1 Points you could discuss:
 
- qualitatively, the phenomenon of resonance: at certain distinct frequencies, vibrations build up to a large amplitude.
 
- modes of vibration: at one frequency all parts of the tower move in phase (all in the same direction at the same time) and at other frequencies some parts move in one direction while other parts move in the opposite direction.
 
- in an earthquake zone, it is important to design tall buildings in such a way as to avoid resonance. The frequencies that make the structure resonate must not be the same as typical frequencies of earthquake waves.
 
2 Students may then explore factors affecting the resonant frequencies of their structures.
 
They could also use a simple mathematical model to predict the lowest resonant frequency of their tower, and compare this with the measured frequency.
 
A vibrating tower of mass m, height h and 'stiffness' k can be modelled, mathematically, as a single mass m mounted at a height h above the base on a massless support of 'stiffness' k. The structure resonates at frequency f = 1/T where
 
T = 2π √(k/m)
 
The stiffness of the tower can be measured by attaching a forcemeter at height of about 2h/3 above the base and measuring the force, F, needed to produce a horizontal displacement x. Then k = F/x.
 
This experiment comes from Salters Horners Advanced Physics ' University of York Science Education Group.
 
Diagrams are reproduced by permission of the copyright holders, Heinemann.

 

 
This experiment was safety-checked in April 2006

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Earthquakes in the laboratory http://www.practicalphysics.org/go/Experiment_244.html

Buildings in earthquake zones need to be designed with modes of vibration and resonance in mind.

Updated 5 Aug 2009

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