I'm working on a problem where a particle of mass $m$ is confined to the surface of an inverted half cone (and is circling downwards due to gravity), with the cone's half angle $\alpha$. I chose to use cylindrical coordinates $(z,\phi,\rho)$ and I used the Lagrangian to solve this problem.
After going through some math, I find the equation of motion for $z$, from which I can write that
$$\ddot{z}\sec(\alpha) - \frac{p^2_{\phi}}{m^2z^3tan^2(\alpha)}+ g = 0$$
Here, $p_{\phi}$ is the angular momentum, which is conserved. Only $z$ depends on time, the other expressions are all constants.
At this point, I've been told that it 'can be seen' that one solution to this is given by a circular motion at constant height $z_c$. I am then asked to impose a small perturbation $z = z_c + \eta$, and (keeping only first order terms in $\eta$) find the period with which $z$ will oscillate around $z_c$.
Now I am pretty clueless how to do this. First of all, how can you see that there is a circular motion at constant height $z_c$? I mean, I can plug in $z = z_c$ and solve for it, but then I don't see how to find the period of something like that with the small perturbation. All the perturbation does is add some terms, but I don't see how they are time dependent and I certainly don't see how to extract a period from it. Could someone perhaps suggest a 'plan of attack'?
If I do simply plug in $z = z_c$ I find that
$$z_c=\left(\frac{p^2_{\phi}}{gm^2\tan^2(\alpha)}\right)^{\frac{1}{3}}$$
which at least has the right units.
Moreover, plugging $z = z_c + \eta$ into the first equation and keeping only first order terms of $\eta$, I find that
$$z = \frac{2z_c}{3} - \frac{p^2_{\phi}}{3z_c^2gm^2\tan^2(\alpha)}$$
But I don't see any period in that.