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AP Physics Chapter 14 Sound. Chapter 14: Sound. 14.1 Sound Waves 14.2 The Speed of Sound 14.3 Sound Intensity and Sound Intensity Level 14.4 Sound Phenomena 14.5 The Doppler Effect 14.6 Musical Instruments and Sound Characteristics. Homework for Chapter 14.
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Chapter 14: Sound 14.1 Sound Waves 14.2 The Speed of Sound 14.3 Sound Intensity and Sound Intensity Level 14.4 Sound Phenomena 14.5 The Doppler Effect 14.6 Musical Instruments and Sound Characteristics
Homework for Chapter 14 • Read Chapter 14 • HW 14.A: pp. 478-479: 10-15,18,28,29,30. • HW 14.B: p. 480-481: 56, 57, 70, 74-78, 84, 85.
Warmup: Cheap Seats Physics Warmup #118 Modern baseball stadiums have a lot more to offer fans than the stadiums of decades past. One thing they still have in common, however, are the “cheap seats.” The back row of the upper deck will always be a long way from home plate. Not only is it hard to see what’s going on, it is even hard to hear what’s going on. ********************************************************************************************* Suppose you are sitting in your cheap seat and you decide to listen to the broadcast of the game on your pocket radio. When the first batter makes contact with the ball, you hear the crack of the bat through your radio earphones before you hear it in the ballpark! Explain why. Answer: The radio transmission travels much farther but it travels at the speed of light. The actual sound wave travels through the ballpark air at the speed of sound.
sound - the sensation produced when hearing vibrations transmitted through the air or other medium. • Sound waves in fluids are primarily longitudinal (compressional) waves. • Sound waves in solids can also have a transverse wave component. • The high pressure regions of a sound wave are called condensations or compressions. • The low pressure regions are called rarefactions. • All sound waves are produced by vibrating sources such as human vocal cords or tuning forks.
A Tuning Fork as an Explanation of Sound A tuning fork is basically a metal bar bent into a U-shape. When struck, the prongs, or tines, vibrate with an antinode at the end of each tine. The fork vibrates at its fundamental frequency, so a single tone is heard. A tone is a sound with a definite frequency. As the fork vibrates, the compression waves propagate outward. The pressure differences in the compression waves causes the eardrum to vibrate. On the other side of the eardrum, tiny bones (the hammer, anvil, and stirrup) carry the vibrations to the inner ear. The auditory nerve picks up the signal and carries it to the brain.
The Sound Frequency Spectrum The audible region of sound for humans lies between about 20 Hz and 20 kHz. infrasonic – frequencies below the range of human hearing. • Can be generated by earthquakes, wind, aircraft, automobiles, rapidly moving objects. • Elephants and cattle may give early warnings of signs of earthquakes and weather disturbances. ultrasonic - frequencies above the range of human hearing. • Can be generated by high-frequency vibrations in crystals. • Ultrasonic whistles can be used to call dogs.
Ultrasound Applications Ultrasound is transmitted through tissue and is reflected from internal structures. The reflected waves are detected, and the signals are used to construct an image, or echogram, such as for a fetus. Sonar is used for ranging and detecting. Sound pulses generated by sonar apparatus are reflected by underwater objects, and the resulting echoes are picked up by a detector. The time required for a sound pulse to make one round trip, together with the speed of sound in water, gives the distance of the reflecting object .
The Speed of Sound in Various Media • The speed of sound in a medium depends on the elasticity or the intermolecular interactions of the medium and the mass or density of its particles. • Solids have more intermolecular interactions than liquids, and liquids more than gases. • The speed of sound is generally 2 to 4 times faster in solids than in liquids and about 10 to 15 times faster in solids than in gases such as air.
• The speed of sound depends on the temperature of the medium. • The speed of sound in air increases with increasing temperature. • For normal environmental temperatures, the speed of sound increases about 0.6 m/s for each degree Celsius above 0°C. • A good approximation of the speed of sound in air for normal environmental temperatures is: v = (331 + 0.6 Tc) m/s speed of sound in air where Tc is the air temperature in degrees Celsius and 331 m/s is the speed of sound in air at 0°C. • A useful general value for the speed of sound in air is 1/3 km/s or 1/5 mi/s.
Example 14.1: The speed of an ultrasonic frequency 45 kHz in air is 342 m/s. • What is the air temperature? • What is the wavelength of the sound wave?
Check for Understanding • A sound wave with a frequency of 15 Hz is in what region of the sound spectrum? • audible • infrasonic • ultrasonic • supersonic Answer: b
Check for Understanding 2. A sound wave in air • is longitudinal • is transverse • has longitudinal and transverse components • travels faster than a sound wave through a liquid Answer: a
Check for Understanding 3. The speed of sound is generally greatest in • solids • liquids • gases • a vacuum Answer: a
Check for Understanding 4. Explain why sound travels faster in warmer air than in colder air. Answer: Sound is a traveling disturbance like any other wave. The speed of the air molecules is greater in warmer air so the air molecules can pass the disturbance along faster.
Check for Understanding • The speed of sound in air a) is about 1/3 km/s b) is about 1/5 mi/s c) depends on temperature d) all of these Answer: d
Warmup: Can You Hear Me Now? Physics Warmup #121 The loudness of sound can be measured in units called decibels (dB). The sound level of a person talking in a normal conversation is typically in the 60-dB range. Continued exposure to sound levels over 85 dB can cause permanent ear damage. People who work in loud environments, such as factories with large machines, are required to wear ear plugs. ********************************************************************************************* Modern technology has made it possible to play music in car stereos that far exceed 85 dB. Many teenagers spend significant amounts of money to raise the decibel level of their car stereos to 120 dB and beyond. As a result, some communities have passed laws limiting the sound level at which music can be played. Express your view on the need for such laws.
intensity (I) is the rate at which power is transferred, per unit area. I = energy/time = power area area • The SI unit of intensity is W/m2. • It is used most frequently with sound or light waves. • The intensity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the point source. • Therefore, intensity follows the inverse square law. Question: What other physical phenomena follow the inverse square law? You may use your Gold Sheet to answer. Answer: gravitational force, electric force
The energy emitted from a point source spreads out equally in all directions. • Since intensity is power/area I = P = P__where the area is that of a spherical surface. A 4 R2 • The intensity then decreases with the distance from the source as 1 R2.
Two intensities at different distances from a source of constant power can be compared as a ratio: I2= P/4 R22 = R12 I2 = R12 I1= P/4 R12 = R22 or I1 R2 • Doubling the distance decreases the intensity to a quarter of its original value. • Sound intensity is perceived by the ear as loudness. • On the average, the human ear can detect sound waves (at 1 kHz) with an intensity as low as Io = 10-12 W/m2. This is called the threshold of hearing. • At an intensity of Ip = 1.0 W/m2 sound is uncomfortably loud and may be painful to the ear. This is called the threshold of pain. • The ratio between the two intensities Ip= 1.0 W/m2= 1012. Io = 10-12 W/m2 • For a sound to be audible, it must have a frequency between 20 Hz and 20 kHz, and have an intensity greater than Io.
Sound Intensity Level – The Decibel (threshold of hearing) • Perceived sound is loudness is not directly proportional to intensity. • Doubling the perceived loudness corresponds to an approximate increase in intensity by a factor of 10. example: A sound with an intensity of 10-5 W/m2 would be perceived to be twice as loud as one with an intensity of 10-6 W/m2.
At the threshold of hearing, I = Io, so, = 10 log Io = 10 log 1 = 0 dB Io • At the threshold of pain, = 10 log 1.0 W/m2 = 10 log 1012 = 10 (12) = 120 dB Io • The 12 orders of magnitude of sound intensity is only a difference of 120 dB – 0 dB = 120 dB, on the decibel scale.
Sound intensity and sound intensity level are two very different things. • Intensity is a direct way to measure energy and is additive. example: The sum of a 1.0 W/m2 sound and a 2.0 W/m2 sound will result in a sound of intensity 1.0 W/m2 + 2.0 W/m2 = 3.0 W/m2. • Intensity level is based on a logarithmic scale and therefore is not additive. example: The sum of a 10 dB sound and a 20 db sound will NOT make a sound of 10 dB + 20 dB 30 dB.
Example 14.3: Mrs. Pizarchik’s lecturing voice has a power of about 0.50 mW. If this power is assumed to be uniformly distributed in all directions, • What is the sound intensity at a distance of 5.00 m from her? • b) If you double the distance between you and the instructor, what is the new sound intensity? • c) What is the new sound intensity if you are 5.00 m apart and she raised her voice to double her power output?
Check for Understanding • If the air temperature increases, would the sound intensity from a constant output point source a) increase b) decrease c) remain unchanged Answer: c 2. The decibel scale is referenced to a standard intensity of a) 1.0 W/m2 b) 10-12 W/m2 c) normal conversation d) the threshold of pain Answer: b
Check for Understanding 3. When sound passes from air into water a) its wavelength does not change b) its frequency does not change c) its velocity does not change d) all of the above are true Answer: b 4. As the temperature of the air increases, what happens to the velocity of sound? (Assume that all other factors remain constant.) a) It increases. b) It decreases. c) It does not change. Answer: a
Homework for Chapter 14.1-3 • HW 14.A: pp. 478-479: 10-15,18,28,29,30.
Warmup: Run the sound simulation. http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/sound
Since sound is a wave, it has wave characteristics. It can be: reflected – waves bounce off objects or surfaces refracted – waves change direction due to a medium or density change. • Temperature causes differences in air density. diffracted – waves bend around corners, spread out beyond openings, or around objects. • The object needs to be small compared to the wavelength. • Large wavelength, low frequency sounds diffract the most. • Sound waves interfere when they meet. constructive interference – two crests or two troughs coincide; in phase destructive interference – a crest and a trough coincide; out of phase
Reflection of Sound • The reflection of sound follows the law "angle of incidence equals angle of reflection", sometimes called the law of reflection. The same behavior is observed with light and other waves, and by the bounce of a billiard ball off the bank of a table. • The reflected waves can interfere with incident waves, producing patterns of constructive and destructive interference. This can lead to resonances called standing waves in rooms. It also means that the sound intensity near a hard surface is enhanced because the reflected wave adds to the incident wave, giving a pressure amplitude that is twice as great in a thin "pressure zone" near the surface.
Refraction of Sound • Sound propagates in all directions from a point source. Normally, only that which is initially directed toward the listener can be heard, but refraction can bend sound downward. • Normally, only the direct sound is received. But refraction can add some additional sound, effectively amplifying the sound. • Natural amplifiers can occur over cool lakes.
Diffraction of Sound The long wavelength sounds of the bass drum will diffract around the corner more efficiently than the more directional, short wavelength sounds of the higher pitched piccolo.
Interference • Sound waves from two point sources spread out and interfere. • At points where they arrive in phase (zero phase difference), constructive interference occurs. • At points where the waves arrive completely out of phase (phase difference of 180°), destructive interference occurs. • The phase difference at a particular point depends on the path lengths the waves travel to reach that point.
Interference Simulation http://www.falstad.com/interference/
Check for Understanding: 3. As a person walks between a pair of loudspeakers that produce tones of the same amplitude and frequency, he hears a varying sound intensity. Explain. Answer: The varying sound intensity is caused by the interference effect. At certain locations there is constructive interference and at other locations, there are destructive interference.
Warmup: Did You Hear What I Saw? Physics Warmup #119 Lightning and thunder are created at the same time by the same event. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, while the speed of sound in air is typically around 700 miles per hour. As a result, you see the lightning before you hear the thunder. ********************************************************************************************* You might have heard the old rule of thumb that every five seconds that elapse between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder represents one mile of distance between you and the lightning. Use the speeds of light and sound to check the accuracy of that statement. Answer: Yes! time for light to travel 1 mile: t = d = 1 mile = 5.4 x 10-6 s (instantaneous) v 186,000 mi/s time for sound to travel 1 mile: 700 mi/hr = 0.194 mi/s t = d = 1 mi = 5.1 seconds v 0.194 mi/s
The Doppler Effect • If there is relative motion between a sound source and an observer, the observer will detect a frequency which is different from the frequency of the source. • This phenomena is called the Doppler effect. It is named after the Austrian physicist, Christian Doppler (1803-1853) who first described the effect. • Generally, if the source and the observer are moving toward each other, the observed frequency is higher than the source frequency. • If the source and the observer are moving away from each other, the observed frequency is lower than the source frequency. View Applet:http://www.loncapa.org/~mmp/applist/doppler/d.htm