Title: Speed of a wave on a string?
1Speed of a wave on a string?
Which of the following determines the wave speed
of a wave on a string? 1. the frequency at which
the end of the string is shaken up and down 2.
the coupling between neighboring parts of the
string, as measured by the tension in the
string 3. the mass of each little piece of
string, as characterized by the mass per unit
length of the string. 4. Both 1 and 2 5. Both 1
and 3 6. Both 2 and 3 7. All three.
2A wave on a string
- What parameters determine the speed of a wave on
a string? - Properties of the medium the tension in the
string, and how heavy the string is. - where µ is the mass per unit length of the string.
3Adding waves the principle of superposition
- When more than one wave is traveling in a medium,
the waves simply add. -
- The principle of superposition the net
displacement of any point in the medium is the
sum of the displacements at that point due to
each individual wave. -
4Constructive interference
- When the displacements of individual waves go in
the same direction at a point, the result is a
large amplitude there, because the displacements
add. This is known as constructive interference.
Simulation.
A neat feature of waves is that, after passing
through one another, waves (or pulses) travel as
if they had never met.
5Destructive interference
- When the displacements of individual waves are in
opposite directions at a point, the waves cancel
(at least partly). This is known as destructive
interference. Simulation.
How is it possible for the two pulses to
re-emerge from the flat string? Where is the
energy to do this?
6Reflections (fixed end)
- How waves reflect at the ends of a medium, or at
the interface between two media, is critical to
understanding things like musical instruments. - When a wave encounters a fixed end, for instance,
it comes back upside down.
Simulation
7Reflections (free end)
- When a wave encounters a free end, it comes back
upright.
8Standing waves
- When two waves of the same frequency and
amplitude travel in opposite directions in a
medium, the result is a standing wave - a wave
that does not travel one way or the other. - If the waves are identical except from their
direction of propagation, they can be described
by the equations - y1 A sin(kx - ?t) and y2 A sin(kx ?t)
- The resultant wave is their
- sum, and can be written as
- y 2A sin(kx) cos(?t)
9Standing waves
- The resultant wave is their sum,
- and can be written as
- y 2A sin(kx) cos(?t)
- This is quite different from the equation for a
traveling wave, because the spatial part is
separated from the time part. It tells us that
the string is totally flat at certain points in
time, and that there are certain positions where
the amplitude is always zero - these points are
called nodes. There are other points halfway
between the nodes where the amplitude is maximum
- these are the anti-nodes.
10Standing waves a string fixed at both ends
- A wave traveling in one direction on the string
reflects off the end, and returns inverted
because the end is fixed. This gives two
identical waves traveling in opposite directions
on the string, just what is needed for a standing
wave. Simulation - The waves reflect from both ends of the string.
Completely constructive interference takes place
only when the wavelength is related to the length
L of the string by - Using , the corresponding
frequencies are - , where n 1, 2, 3, ...
where n 1, 2, 3, ...
11Standing waves a string fixed at both ends
- The lowest resonance frequency (n 1) is known
as the fundamental frequency for the string. All
the higher frequencies are known as harmonics -
these are integer multiples of the fundamental
frequency.
12Standing waves a string fixed at both ends
second harmonic (n 2)
third harmonic (n 3)
fourth harmonic (n 4)
13Standing waves a string fixed at both ends
- All stringed musical instruments have strings
fixed at both ends. When they are played, the
sound you hear is some combination of the
fundamental frequency and the different harmonics
- it's because the harmonics are included that
the sound sounds musical. A pure sine wave does
not sound nearly so nice.
14Standing waves a tube open at both ends
- For a tube open at both ends, reflections of the
sound at both ends produce a large-amplitude wave
for particular resonance frequencies. For the
standing waves, an open end is an anti-node
(maximum amplitude point) for displacement.
15Standing waves a tube open at both ends
- Simulation transverse representation
- Simulation longitudinal representation
- The resonance frequencies are given by the same
equation we used for the string
16Standing waves a tube closed at one end only
- For a tube closed at one end, the closed end is a
node (zero displacement) while the open end is an
anti-node (maximum displacement). This leads to a
different equation for the resonance frequencies.
- , where n can only be odd integers
- Simulation transverse Simulation longitudinal
17Standing waves a tube closed at one end only
- For a tube closed at one end, the closed end is a
node (zero displacement) while the open end is an
anti-node (maximum displacement). This leads to a
different equation for the resonance frequencies.
- , where n can only be odd integers
- Simulation transverse representation
- Simulation longitudinal representation
18Whiteboard