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Standing Waves. A standing wave is the result of two waves of the same frequency and amplitude traveling in the opposite directions through the same medium. Standing Waves. A point of no disturbance in a standing wave is called a node .
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Standing Waves • A standing wave is the result of two waves of the same frequency and amplitude traveling in the opposite directions through the same medium.
Standing Waves • A point of no disturbance in a standing wave is called a node. • A point in standing wave where the amplitude is maximum is called an antinode.
Standing Waves • The fundamental frequency (or natural frequency) of a medium occurs when it vibrates with the simplest standing wave – 2 nodes + 1 antinode.
Standing Waves • The harmonic of a wave is a component frequency of the wave that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency. • 1st Harmonic = 5 • 2nd Harmonic = 10 • 3rd Harmonic = 15 • 4th Harmonic = 20
Sound Waves Physics 1
Sound • Mechanical waves • Longitudinal • sound • Speed dependent upon two things: • elasticity • density
Sound as a Pressure Wave • Sound is created as a pressure wave. • The air compresses in an area of high pressure (compressions) followed by areas of low pressure where the air expands (rarefactions)
Elasticity & Sound Speed • How much a material will compress under pressure • Material wants to maintain its shape (e.g. steel) • rigid material • LOW elasticity • HIGH speed of sound (FAST) • Material easily deforms (e.g. rubber) • flexible material • HIGH elasticity • LOW speed of sound (SLOW)
Density & Sound Speed • Dependent on material type • Fastest in solids • Then liquids • Then gasses • Density has biggest impact on speed • Within a single medium (e.g. air) temperature can impact speed
Speed of Sound For the speed of sound in air, where tc is in degrees Celsius Higher temperature – faster speed of sound
Intensity of Sound The sound intensity is the sound power that passes perpendicular through a surface per unit of surface area.
Intensity of Sound If a source emits sound uniformly in all directions, one can imagine the energy spreading out in a spherical pattern.
Intensity of Sound The smallest sound intensity audible to the human hearing is 1 x 10-12 W/m2. This intensity is called the threshold of hearing (I0). Since human hearing has a wide range, the intensity of audible sounds is compared to the intensity at the threshold of hearing.
Intensity of Sound The sound intensity of a vacuum cleaner is around 1 x 10-5 W/m2. Comparing this intensity to the threshold of hearing,
Intensity of Sound Due to the large comparison, it is more appropriate to express this relative intensity (b) in a logarithmic scale.
Frequency of Sound The perceived frequency of an observer or pitch (fo) of an emitted frequency of a sound source (fs) depends on whether the observer or the source are in motion. The ACTUAL emitted frequency does NOT change!!! http://www.acs.psu.edu/drussell/Demos/doppler/doppler.html http://library.thinkquest.org/27948/doppler.html
Frequency of Sound Source and Observer at rest
Frequency of Sound • fo=frequency perceived by observer • fs=frequency emitted by source • vo=velocity of observer • vs=velocity of source • v=velocity of sound
Frequency of Sound • vs =velocity of source • - (negative) when moving TOWARD observer • + (positive)when moving AWAY from observer • vo =velocity of observer • - (negative)when moving AWAYfrom source • + (positive) when TOWARDsource • v=velocity of sound
Doppler Effect – Moving Source Moving Source
Doppler Effect – Moving Source TOWARDS observer • Wavelength gets smaller as source moves closer to observer • Frequency gets faster/higher/bigger • pitch gets higher
Doppler Effect – Moving SourceAWAY FROM observer • Wavelength gets longer/smaller as source moves away from observer • Frequency gets smaller/lower • pitch gets lower
Frequency of Sound • vs =velocity of source • - (negative) when moving TOWARD observer • + (positive)when moving AWAY from observer • vo =velocity of observer • - (negative)when moving AWAYfrom source • + (positive) when TOWARDsource • v=velocity of sound
Doppler Effect – Moving Observer Moving Observer
Doppler Effect – Moving ObserverTOWARDS source • Wavelength gets smaller as observer moves closer to source • Frequency gets faster/higher/bigger • pitch gets higher
Doppler Effect – Moving ObserverAWAY FROM source • Wavelength gets longer (bigger) as observer moves away from to source • Frequency gets slower/lower/smaller • pitch gets lower
Sonic Booms http://www.acs.psu.edu/drussell/Demos/doppler/doppler.html http://www.falstad.com/ripple/
Breaking sound barrier • http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49414119#49414119 • http://www.wimp.com/breaksbarrier/
Beats • Beats are the periodic and repeating fluctuations heard in the intensity of a sound when two sound waves of very similar frequencies interfere with one another. • Beat Frequency … • Beat frequency is absolute value of difference between two close frequencies
Resonance • The frequency or frequencies at which an object tends to vibrate with when hit, struck, plucked, strummed or somehow disturbed is known as the natural frequency of the object. • The tendency of one object to force another adjoining or interconnected object into vibrational motion is referred to as a forced vibration.
Resonance • Resonance occurs when two interconnected objects share the same vibrational frequency. When one of the objects is vibrating, it forces the second object into vibrational motion. The result is a large vibration.
Resonance • Tacoma Narrows Bridge http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mclp9QmCGs
Physics in Music • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mh5rh3cbvQA