A point p moves in the circle x^2 + y^2 = r^2 with constant angular velocity w. Prove that the foot M of the perpendicular from P onto the x-axis describes a simple harmonic motion about the centre of the circle.
What I've done, is let x = rcos@
Then I differentiate it, I get dx/dt = -rsin@ x (d@/dt)
When I take the second derivative, I get
-rsin@ x (dw/dt) - rcos@ x (d@/dt)^2
But, I'm still having problems proving SHM
What I've done, is let x = rcos@
Then I differentiate it, I get dx/dt = -rsin@ x (d@/dt)
When I take the second derivative, I get
-rsin@ x (dw/dt) - rcos@ x (d@/dt)^2
But, I'm still having problems proving SHM