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Chapter 12.1-SOUND

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Title: Chapter 12.1-SOUND


1
Chapter 12.1-SOUND
2
4. SPEED OF SOUND
  • Much slower than light
  • Thunder and Lightning
  • Five second delay per mile
  • Depends on wind, temperature, humidity

3
Speed of Sound
The Speed of Sound depends on the density of the
medium through which the sound waves travel.
Medium In ft./s In m/s
Air at 20 C 1116 340
Distilled Water 25 C 4908 1496
Seawater 25 C 5023 1531
Steel 17100 5200
4
Reflection
5
Loudness is related to the energy (amplitude) in
the sound wave. The pitch of a sound refers to
whether it is high, like a flute, or low like
string bass. The lower the frequency of sound,
the lower the pitch.
6
ENERGY IN SOUND WAVES
  • Energy in sound is weak when compared to the
    energy in light.
  • The human ear is a remarkable detector.
  • 10 million people speaking at the same time
    produce approximately enough energy to light one
    flashlight.

7
Loudness Intensitymeasured in decibels
8
Pitch
  • Relative highness or lowness of a note.
  • adding PITCH to rhythm and amplitude creates
    melody

9
Frequency
  • A sound that vibrates back and forth 1,000 times
    per second like a tuning fork has a frequency of
    a 1,000 Hz
  • The frequency of the human auditory system has a
    range from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz

10
  • Frequencies for
  • musical notes

11
Octave
  • a pitch an octave higher than another has ii20
    double its frequency
  • Example 440 Hertz 2 880 Hertz
  • a pitch an octave lower has ii21 half the
    frequency
  • Example 440 Hertz .5 220 Hertz

A3 A4 A5
12
Standing waves in instruments
  • Guitar all stringed instruments have sounding
    boards or boxes to amplify sound!
  • (hyperlink on picture)

13
Ultrasonic Sound
  • Anything above frequencies, anything above 20,000
    Hz
  • Used for communication and navigation by bats and
    dolphins

14
Ultrasonic Waves
  • Ultrasonic waves are short
  • Widespread medical applications
  • Used to produce images inside the human body
  • hyperlinks on each image

15
Infrasonic Waves
  • Sound waves with frequencies less than 20 Hz.
  • They are produced by such things as heavy
    machinery and thunder.
  • They are really low pitched sounds.
  • Elephants can communicate from kilometers away
    using infrasonic waves.

16
Elephants hear through their feet.
  • Flexible, soft skin of the foot acts like a drum
    head, which sense vibrations which travel from
    the toe nails to the ear by bone conduction.
    Foot stomping and low frequency rumbling
    generated by one group of elephants are picked up
    by another group far away.

17
FORCED VIBRATIONS
  • Demo - Tuning Fork Touching a Table
  • Sound is intensified because of the larger
    surface area that can vibrate the air.
  • The surface is forced to vibrate at the frequency
    of the tuning fork. (It is not a resonance
    phenomenon.)
  • Examples Musical sounding boards

18
NATURAL FREQUENCY
  • Demo - Drop Different Sounding Objects
  • Objects have natural frequencies at which they
    vibrate.
  • The natural frequency depends on elasticity and
    shape.

19
RESONANCE
  • Resonance occurs when we force a vibration at the
  • same frequency in
  • another object.

20
Middle Ear Schematic
21
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