Oscillations are reoccurring and regular fluctuations between particular states within a system. These states could be discrete, such as a car's turn signal blinking on and off; continuous, such as a wave; damped, such as the gradual decay of the amplitude of a vibrating guitar string; or driven, such as the forced motion of someone on a swing.
The states involved in an oscillation don't have to just be mechanical in nature. For example, the Stock Market oscillates between a bull and a bear market, or your favorite style of music may oscillate between jazz and blues. Even driving to and from work everyday along the same route at the same time is an oscillation.
The key things to remember are that oscillations require a "back and forth" motion, and that this motion must happen again and again and again. Thus, bouncing a Basketball off the ground and then catching it isn't an oscillation, because the "back and forth" motion only happens once. Additionally, the Earth's orbit around the Sun isn't an oscillation, because, while it does indeed happen over and over again, the motion isn't "back and forth."
oscillate means to and fro motion of a body
or to swing
NO. They do not oscillate.
A: Very easy to do just provide a positive feedback and/or a phase shift it will oscillate
Yes. It may respond to harmonic frequencies also.
Yes. In almost all cases, the current follows the voltage waveform. The peak amplitude of the current depends on the device or appliance that's drawing the current.
By definition, all oscillators move over a repeatable range. This could be circular, as in the orbit of the moon, or up and down between two limits, such as a wave of sound and electromagnetic systems. Oscillation is usually inferred to be a smooth activity, though I could say I oscillate between work and home.
NO. They do not oscillate.
Yes, oscillate is a verb.
I hope you are not expecting any technical related sentence containing the word oscillate since you have posted the question under Science Category. However, a sentence for the word oscillate can be "the pendulum of a clock oscillates across it's mean position after every 1 second."
The swing will oscillate after Helen moves it.
The part of speech for oscillate is verb.
I would say that it might be like switching from one form of reality into another. Like from one dimension to another. To oscillate from one dimension to another. To switch. Like you would press a button on a remote control to change a television channel to another one. You would oscillate/switch from one to another.
The word "oscillate" in everyday speech means to go back and forth, either physically or mentally. An example of a sentence using the word "oscillate" is "My new job is great, but I have to oscillate between New York and Los Angeles at least once a week. "
No, the output of monostable multivibrator does not oscillate. As it has only one stable output we do not get oscillations. We get a square wave as output.
Oscillation is a noun and doesn't have any tenses. Oscillate is a verb. Oscillated is the past tense and past participle of oscillate.
bounce, duck, hop, oscillate
Oscillate?
No need to oscillate. It always behaves like whichever one your experiment is set up to detect.