The equilibrium position is the point where the net force on an object is zero, so it stays at rest or moves at constant velocity if left there. In simple harmonic motion, it's the center of the oscillation, where displacement is zero, speed is maximum, and the restoring force vanishes.
The equilibrium position is the spot where all the forces on an object balance out to zero net force. Park an object exactly there with no velocity, and it just sits. For a horizontal spring-block system, it's where the spring is at its natural length. For a mass hanging from a vertical spring, it's where the upward spring force exactly cancels gravity, which means the spring is already stretched at equilibrium.
In simple harmonic motion, the equilibrium position is the anchor of everything. Displacement is measured from it, the restoring force always points toward it, and the force gets stronger the farther you move away (that's the F = -kx relationship for a spring). The oscillator never settles at equilibrium while it's moving, though. It blows through that point at maximum speed every half cycle, because zero net force means zero acceleration, not zero velocity.
Equilibrium position is the reference point for Topics 6.1 (Period of Simple Harmonic Oscillators) and 6.2 (Energy of a Simple Harmonic Oscillator). You can't define amplitude, displacement, or the restoring force without first locating equilibrium. It also plugs directly into Topic 4.3's energy conservation reasoning. At equilibrium, the spring's potential energy is at its minimum and kinetic energy is at its maximum, so tracking energy as an oscillator moves toward or away from equilibrium is one of the most reliable problem-solving moves on the exam. Get the equilibrium point wrong (especially for vertical springs) and every energy and displacement calculation that follows goes wrong with it.
Keep studying AP Physics 1 Unit 6
Restoring Force (Unit 6)
The restoring force is what makes equilibrium matter. It always points back toward the equilibrium position, and for a spring its magnitude grows linearly with displacement. No restoring force toward a point means no oscillation about that point.
Elastic Potential Energy (Units 4 & 6)
Elastic potential energy is measured from equilibrium. It's zero (or minimum) at the equilibrium position and maximum at the turning points, so kinetic energy does the opposite. This trade-off is the entire engine of Topic 6.2 energy analysis.
Stable Equilibrium (Unit 6)
An equilibrium is stable when a small nudge produces a force pushing the object back toward that point. Simple harmonic motion only happens around stable equilibria. A ball balanced on top of a hill is at equilibrium too, but nudge it and it never comes back.
Conservation of Energy (Unit 4)
Topic 4.3 energy bookkeeping is how you actually compute speeds in SHM. Set total mechanical energy at a turning point (all potential) equal to the energy at equilibrium (all kinetic) and you get the maximum speed without touching kinematics.
Spring-oscillator problems on AP Physics 1 almost always orbit this term. The 2018 SAQ Q5 describes a block 'oscillating with period T and amplitude A about the spring's equilibrium position,' so you needed to recognize equilibrium as the center of the motion and reason about how period and energy change. The 2022 Short FRQ Q5 hangs a spring from a ceiling with a hanger and motion detector, which tests whether you know the equilibrium of a vertical spring sits below the unstretched length by mg/k. Expect MCQs asking where speed, acceleration, kinetic energy, or restoring force is maximum or zero during oscillation. The trap answers count on you mixing up equilibrium (zero force, max speed) with the endpoints (max force, zero speed). On FRQs, you're often asked to justify in words why kinetic energy peaks at equilibrium, which is a quick energy-conservation argument.
Students mix these up because 'the object is momentarily at rest' sounds like equilibrium. It isn't. At the turning points (displacement = amplitude), velocity is zero but the net force and acceleration are at their maximum, pointed back toward center. At the equilibrium position it's the reverse. Net force and acceleration are zero, but speed and kinetic energy are at their maximum. Remember it this way: equilibrium describes force, not motion.
The equilibrium position is where the net force on the object equals zero, not where the object stops moving.
In simple harmonic motion, the oscillator passes through equilibrium with maximum speed and maximum kinetic energy.
The restoring force always points toward the equilibrium position and increases with distance from it, which is what F = -kx says for a spring.
For a mass on a vertical spring, the equilibrium position is below the spring's natural length by mg/k, because the spring must stretch until its force balances gravity.
Elastic potential energy is minimum at equilibrium and maximum at the turning points, so energy conservation lets you find speeds anywhere in the cycle.
An equilibrium is stable only if a small displacement creates a force pushing the object back, and oscillation only happens around stable equilibria.
It's the point where the net force on an object is zero, so an object placed there at rest stays at rest. In simple harmonic motion it's the center point of the oscillation, where displacement is zero and speed is maximum.
No, not while it's oscillating. An oscillator moves fastest as it passes through equilibrium, because zero net force means zero acceleration, not zero velocity. The object is momentarily at rest at the turning points, where the force is actually at its maximum.
The equilibrium position is the center of the oscillation where net force is zero, while amplitude is the maximum distance the object travels from that center. Force and acceleration peak at amplitude; speed and kinetic energy peak at equilibrium.
It's below the spring's unstretched length by a distance of mg/k, the stretch needed for the spring force to balance gravity. The 2022 Short FRQ with a spring, hanger, and motion detector tested exactly this setup.
Because elastic potential energy is at its minimum there. Total mechanical energy is constant in SHM (with no friction), so when potential energy bottoms out at equilibrium, all of it has converted to kinetic energy, giving maximum speed.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.
Review units, study guides, and course resources.
Check this vocabulary in multiple-choice context.
Apply key concepts in written AP responses.
Estimate the exam score you are working toward.
Review the highest-yield facts before practice.
Put the full course together before test day.