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    • https://phys.libretexts.org/Courses/Merrimack_College/Conservation_Laws_Newton's_Laws_and_Kinematics_version_2.0/23%3A_N10)_Simple_Harmonic_Motion/23.05%3A_Examples
      Take the “zero” of gravitational potential energy to be at the height \(y_{0}^{\prime}\) (the equilibrium point; you may also use this as the origin for the vertical coordinate!), and calculate all th...Take the “zero” of gravitational potential energy to be at the height \(y_{0}^{\prime}\) (the equilibrium point; you may also use this as the origin for the vertical coordinate!), and calculate all the energies in the system (kinetic, spring/elastic, and gravitational) at the highest point in the oscillation, the equilibrium point, and the lowest point.
    • https://phys.libretexts.org/Courses/Gettysburg_College/Gettysburg_College_Physics_for_Physics_Majors/24%3A_Simple_Harmonic_Motion/24.05%3A_Examples
      Take the “zero” of gravitational potential energy to be at the height \(y_{0}^{\prime}\) (the equilibrium point; you may also use this as the origin for the vertical coordinate!), and calculate all th...Take the “zero” of gravitational potential energy to be at the height \(y_{0}^{\prime}\) (the equilibrium point; you may also use this as the origin for the vertical coordinate!), and calculate all the energies in the system (kinetic, spring/elastic, and gravitational) at the highest point in the oscillation, the equilibrium point, and the lowest point.

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