Title: Chapter 12: Sound
1Chapter 12 Sound
2Do Now 3/23/09
- Sound waves are longitudinal waves. When sound
waves occur in air, air molecules press together
and push apart. Based on what you know about
longitudinal waves and what they look like, draw
a picture of what you think the air molecules in
a sound wave look like.
3Sound Waves are Longitudinal
High Pressure COMPRESSION
Low Pressure RAREFACTION
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5Compressions and Rarefactions occur in any
Longitudinal Wave
6Speed of Sound depends on Medium
- Sound waves can travel through gases, liquids,
and solids. - Sound travels faster in liquids than in gases,
and even faster in solids. The reason why sound
travels the fastest in solids is because the
particles are already close together they come
into contact with each other more frequently.
Therefore, the disturbance can travel through the
solid faster since the particles are already
close together. - Will sound travel faster in air or in water?
In air or in steel?
7Pitch
- High pitch sounds have high frequency waves
- Low pitch sounds have low frequency waves
- The average human can hear pitches with
frequencies from about 20 to 20,000 Hz. - Sounds with frequencies from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz
are called audible sounds
8Infrasonic and Ultrasonic Sound
- Sound waves with frequencies below 20 Hz are
called infrasonic - Sound waves with frequencies above 20,000 Hz are
called ultrasonic - We cannot hear infrasonic of ultrasonic sound
waves, but many animals can. - Bats, dogs, dolphins can hear ultrasonic sounds
Elephants and giraffes can hear infrasonic
sounds.
9Do Now 3/24/09
- Draw a sound wave with compressions and
rarefactions. Label the compressions and
rarefactions. Draw the sine curve (underneath
your sound wave drawing) that corresponds to the
sound wave. Label the crests and troughs of the
wave that is represented by the sine curve.
10Doppler Effect
- When a fire engine approaches you, you experience
the sound waves of its siren more frequently
(high pitched sound). But as it moves away from
you, you encounter the waves less frequently (low
pitched sound). - The Doppler Effect occurs whenever there is
relative motion between the source of waves and
the observer. Either one can move towards the
other, or both could be moving at the same time.
- A person standing in front of the ambulance will
hear a higher pitch. A person standing behind
the ambulance will hear a lower pitch. - There is only a change in frequency the speed of
the sound waves does not change (speed of sound
in air is always 340 m/s)
11Do Now 3/25
- 1.) As the air temperature increases, what
happens to the speed of sound? - 2.) Does sound travel faster in water or steel?
- 3.) Why does the sound of a fire engines siren
get louder as the fire engine approaches you?
12Sound Intensity
- The rate at which wave energy is transferred
through the area in which the sound wave occurs. - Intensity ?E / ?t
- area
- Power is also the rate at which energy is
transferred, so intensity can be described in
terms of Power. - Intensity Power
- area
- Units W/m2
13Sound Intensity
- Intensity Power
- 4p (distance from the source)2
- Intensity Power
- 4pr2
14Forced Vibration
- When one vibrating object forces another object
to vibrate, producing a louder sound. - Examples Cell phone vibrating on table forces
the table to vibrate, and an increase in sound
occurs. A guitar string attached to the body of
a guitar forces wooden body to vibrate, and an
increase in sound occurs.
15Natural Frequency and Resonance
- Every object has a natural frequency - the
frequency at which the object will naturally
vibrate. - When an objects natural frequency matches the
frequency of a forced vibration, an increase in
amplitude occurs this is called resonance. - A swing has a natural frequency. When you pump
your legs back and forth, you are causing a
forced vibration in the swing. When your
frequency the frequency at which you pump your
legs matches the natural frequency of the
swing, an increase in amplitude occurs.
16Do Now 3/31/09
- 1.) What are the nodes of a standing wave? What
are the antinodes? - 2.) How can you find the speed of a wave?
- 3.) Solve the following sequence for n 1, 2,
and 3 - Fn 2n 5
17Harmonic Series
- The series of frequencies of a vibrating string
L ?1/2 ?1 2L
string length and half the wavelength
V (wave speed) f? f v/? By substituting in ?1
2L we get f v/?1 v/2L (fundamental
frequency, or first harmonic)
18String length and wavelength
?2 L. f v/? v/?2 v/L 2(v/2L) or 2
times the fundamental frequency f2 (2nd
frequency) 2f1 (2 times the fundamental
frequency). This is called the second harmonic
of the vibrating string, because it is the second
possible vibration for the string.
19- The third harmonic frequency is equal to three
times the fundamental frequency or the first
harmonic - f3 3f1
- The fourth harmonic frequency is equal to four
times the fundamental frequency - f4 4f1
- Each harmonic is a multiple of the first harmonic
(the fundamental frequency). Therefore, fn nf1
where f1 is the fundamental frequency (f1 v/2L)
and fn is the frequency of the nth harmonic.
20Harmonic Series
- The series of frequencies, including the
fundamental frequency and the multiples of the
fundamental frequency - Harmonic series of a vibrating string
- fn nv
- 2L n 1, 2, 3,
- frequency
- harmonic number x (speed of the waves on the
string) - 2(length of the vibrating string)
21Harmonic Series of a pipe open at both ends
- fn nv
- 2L n 1, 2, 3,
- frequency
- harmonic number x (speed of sound in pipe)
- 2(length of vibrating air column)
22Harmonic Series of a pipe closed at one end
- If one end of the pipe is closed, only the odd
harmonics are present. - The simplest vibration occurs when the length of
the pipe is ¼ of the wavelength - (L ¼ ?1)
- ?1 4L (4 times the length of the pipe)
- v (wave speed) f?
- f v/? v/?1 v/4L
- f1 (fundamental frequency) v/4L
23- The second type of vibration occurs when the
length of the pipe is ¾ the wavelength - L 3/4? ? ? 4/3L
- f3 3f1 The second frequency has been skipped,
moving right to the third frequency. - Only the odd harmonics are present when one end
of the pipe is closed.
24Harmonic Series of a pipe closed at one end
- Fn nv
- 4L n 1, 3, 5,
- Frequency
- harmonic number x (speed of sound in pipe)
- 4(length of vibrating air column)
25Do Now 4/2/09
- 1.) The following is a diagram of the sound waves
produced by a moving police car. In which
direction is the police car moving? - If the police car remains stationary,
- in which direction is the observer
- moving?
- 2.) What are the compressions of a sound wave?
What are the rarefactions? - 3.) How can infrasonic sounds be used? How can
ultrasonic sounds be used? - 4.) As the decibel level is increased by 10 dB,
what happens to the intensity of a sound?
26Beats
- When two compressions of a sound wave meet, the
sound is at a maximum (at its loudest). - When a rarefaction and a compression meet, the
sound is at a minimum. - These variations in loudness are called beats.
- Two sound waves that are in phase then out of
phase then in phase again and so on, produce
beats.
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28Beat Frequency
- The beat frequency will tell you how many beats
are heard each second. - The beat frequency is the difference between the
two frequencies. - If one sound has a frequency of 200 Hz and
another sound has a frequency of 204 Hz, the
number of beats heard each second is 4.
Therefore, the beat frequency 4 Hz (beats per
second)
29- A piano tuner using a 392 Hz tuning fork to tune
the wire for G-natural hears four beats per
second. What are the two possible frequencies of
vibration of this piano wire? - Two notes are sounding, one of which is 440 Hz.
If a beat frequency of 5 Hz is heard, what is the
other notes frequency? How many beats are heard
each second? - Suppose three tuning forks of frequencies 120 Hz,
125 Hz, and 127 Hz are available. What beat
frequencies are possible for these forks sounded
together?