In
engineering, the
damping ratio is a
dimensionless measure describing how oscillations in a system decay after a disturbance. Many systems exhibit oscillatory behavior when they are disturbed from their position of
static equilibrium. A mass suspended from a spring, for example, might, if pulled and released, bounce up and down. On each bounce, the system is "trying" to return to its equilibrium position, but overshoots it. Sometimes losses (e.g.
frictional)
damp the system and can cause the oscillations to gradually decay in amplitude towards zero or
attenuate. The damping ratio is a measure of describing how rapidly the oscillations decay from one bounce to the next.