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6.1-6.3 Vibrations and Waves. J. Pulickeel SPH3U1 January 2010. What is a Wave?. A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy through matter or space. a wave is the motion of a disturbance. What is a Wave?.
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6.1-6.3Vibrations and Waves J. Pulickeel SPH3U1 January 2010
What is a Wave? • A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy through matter or space. • a wave is the motion of a disturbance
What is a Wave? • No it does not. Electromagneticwaves (Light, heat, x rays, radio waves ) can travel through the vacuum of space. • Recall... Does a wave need matter to be a wave? Wavelength λ (m) Approximate Wavelength Scale Frequency (Hz) Visible Light Spectrum 700 nm 400 nm
What is a Wave? • Other waves travel through a medium like rope, water, sand, air, people (at a baseball game), etc... These are called Mechanical Waves. • We will be talking about mechanical waves in this unit.
What makes a wave • A wave that consists of a single pulse is called a pulse wave. • This can be done with a single flick of your wrist. Click here for Phet Animation
What makes a wave • Whenever the source of a wave’s motion is a periodic motion, such as the motion of your hand moving up and down repeatedly, a periodic wave is produced. • Notice that the individual particle of the wave does not change location. Its displacement is 0.
Transverse waves • A second type of wave is a transverse wave. • In a transverse wave the pulse travels perpendicularto the disturbance or the rest axis.
Transverse Waves • Transverse waves occur when we wiggle the slinky back and forth or when the source disturbance follows a periodic motion. • The wave formed here is a SINE wave. • Transverse vs. Longtitudal Wave Animation
Longitudinal Wave • The wave we see here is a longitudinal wave. • The medium particles vibrate parallel to the motion of the pulse. • This is the same type of wave that we use to transfer sound.
Longitudinal Wave compression rarefaction
Water Waves • Water waves are a combination of both longitudinal and transverse motions. • As a wave travels through the waver, the particles travel in clockwise circles. The radius of the circles decreases as the depth into the water increases.
Anatomy of a Wave • Consider the below wave. Label the wavelength, crest, trough and amplitude. • How many cycles are illustrated? • What points (E,G,J) are in phase with B ? • Which points (E,G,J) are out of phase with B?
Wave Races • The waves have different but similar • Which wave would with the wave race (have one oscillation pass the blue line first)?
Wave Period (T) seconds/cycle • It is the time it takes for one cycle to complete. • 86 400 seconds/cycle moon around earth • 31 556 926 seconds/cycle earth around the sun • It also is the reciprocal of the frequency.
Wave Frequency (f) # of cycles/second • The frequency measure how often something happens over a certain amount of time. • We can measure how many times a pulse passes a fixed point over a given amount of time, and this will give us the frequency. • The frequency is exactly the same as the source. It never changes, even if its speed and wavelength do! A slinky back and forth, and 6 waves pass a point in 2 seconds. What would the frequency be? • 3 cycles / second • 3 Hz
Wave Speed m/s T = s/cycle f = # of cycles/s λ= m v = fλ