Title: Sound and Light
1Sound and Light
2Good vibrations
- All sounds are caused by something
- that vibrates.
- 1. When these vibrations collide with air
- molecules (or another medium)
- sound waves are formed
- 2. Sound waves are compressional waves
- - they have two regions called
- compressions and rarefactions.
3Compressional Waves
- Rarefaction air molecules pulled apart
- Compression air molecules pushed together
4Medium
- The type of matter that the sound waves travel
through - 1. A sound waves speed depends on the substance
solid liquid or gas. - Sound need a medium it cannot travel in a
vacuum! - 2. Sound travels more quickly through solids and
liquids because their particles are closer
together than in a gas
5How Much is faster?
- AIR 347 m/s
- CORK 500 m/s
- WATER 1,498 m/s
- BRICK 3,650 m/s
- ALUMINUM 4,877 m/s
6Turn on the Heat!
- 3. As a mediums temperature increases, the
molecules move faster and bump into each other
more often so it conducts sound faster!
7Properties of Sounds
8Speed of sound
- The speed of sound depends on the medium.
- Sound waves travel faster through liquids and
solids than through gases. - The particles are much closer in liquids and
solids so the vibrations are transferred much
faster from one particle to the next. - EXCEPTS Solids such as rubber dampen vibrations
so that sound travels very slowly. Materials
like this can be used for soundproofing!
9How Loud is It?
- A. The amount of energy a wave carries
- corresponds to its amplitude, which is
- related to the density of the particles in the
- compressions and rarefactions
- 1. Intensity The amount of energy that flows
through a certain area in a specific amount of
time - 2. Loudness human perception of sound
- intensity
10Intensity
- Intensity of a sound describes the loudness at a
particular distance from the source of the sound.
11Measure It!
- 3. Sound intensity is measured in decibels
- a) Decibels are measured in a logarithmic scale
and shown by the symbol db - b) Increasing intensity by 3 db is 2 times as
loud. 63 db is 2 X 60 db - c) Increasing intensity by 10 db is 10 times as
loud. 70 db is 10 X 60 db
12Common Noises
- 1. weakest sound heard - 0 dB
- 2. normal conversation at 3-5 ft - 60-70 dB
- 3. dial tone of telephone - 80 dB
- 4. city traffic inside car - 85 dB
- 5. regular sustained exposure may cause
- permanent damage - 90-95 dB
- 6. power mower - 107 dB
- 7. power saw - 110 dB
13Getting Really Loud
- 1. regular sustained exposure may cause
- permanent damage - 90-95 dB
- 2. average Ipod on 5/10 setting - 94 dB
- 3. bass drum rolls - 106 dB
- 4. amplified rock music at 4-6 ft. - 120 dB
- 5. Pain begins 125 dB
- 6. pneumatic riveter at 4 ft. - 125 dB
- 7. jet engine at 100 ft. - 140 dB
- 8. rock music peak - 150 dB
- 9. loudest sound that can occur - 194 dB
14Pitch
- B. Pitch how low or high a sound seems to be
- 1. Frequency is the number of compressions or
rarefactions of a sound wave that pass per second
humans hear about 20 20,000 Hz - 2. Ultrasonic over 20,000. Is outside the
range of human hearing. - 3. Infrasonic or subsonic below 20 Hz may be
felt like a rumble but not heard. It is any
frequency above human hearing range.
15Doppler Effect
- C. Doppler effect Change in pitch or
- frequency due to a moving listener or
- source
16Music
17Music
- Sounds that are deliberately used in a regular
pattern - Natural Frequency the frequency at which the
material vibrates - Resonance The ability of a medium to vibrate
by absorbing energy at its own natural frequency
18Sound Quality
- The difference between sounds of the same pitch
and loudness is sound quality - Overtone vibration with a frequency that is a
multiple of the fundamental frequency
19Musical Instruments
- Devices used to make musical sounds
- Strings
- Sound produced by plucking, striking, or drawing
a bow across tightly stressed strings bow strings - Brass and woodwinds air vibrations in a
resonator or hollow chamber that amplifies sound
pitch determined by length of air tube - Percussion struck shaken rubbed or brushed
struck brushed - Beats pulsing vibration in loudness pulsing
loudness
20Hearing and the Ear
21Mechanics of the ear
- The ear is divided into 3 parts or regions
- Outer
- Middle
- Inner
22Mechanics of the ear cont.
- Sound enters through the outer ear and down the
ear canal. The ear canal ends with the eardrum
(thin flat piece of tissue). - When sound hits the eardrum, it vibrates.
- These vibrations pass through the small bones of
the middle ear (Hammer, anvil, and stirrup) - When vibrations reach the stirrup, the stirrup
strikes a membrane at the opening of the inner
ear.
23Mechanics of the ear cont.
- The waves in the inner ear go through the
spiral-shaped cochlea (also called the basilar
membrane). - Different parts of the basilar membrane vibrate
at different natural frequencies. - As the waves pass through the cochlea, they
resonate with specific parts of the basilar
membrane. - Hairs near this area stimulate nerve fibers which
send an impulse to the brain. - The brain interprets this impulse as a sound with
a specific frequency.
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25Using Sound
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27Sound
- Used for entertainment, warning signals,
information - Acoustics study of sound to create a good
listening environment - Echolocation locating objects by sending out a
signal and interpreting the waves reflected back
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30Sound
- Sonar a system that uses the reflection of
underwater sounds waves to locate objects
underwater - Ultrasound used in medicine to diagnose,
monitor, and treat many conditions - Can produce images of internal structures
- Can treat certain medical problems such as kidney
stones
31The Nature of Light
32Thomas Young
- In 1801, Thomas Young devised an experiment to
test the nature of light. He realized that the
pattern created is similar to the pattern caused
by water waves interfering such as the ripple
tank.
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34Light can be modeled as a wave
- We have learned light waves can be described as
transverse wave which do not require a medium. - They are also called electromagnetic waves
because they consist of changing electric and
magnetic fields. - Light waves can
- Reflect in a mirror
- Refract through a lens
- Diffract passing through a narrow opening
35Wave model does not explain all observations
- When light strikes a piece of metal, electrons
get excited and may fly off the metals surface. - Experiments show that not all colors of light can
knock the electrons off the metal. - Dim blue light can knock some electrons off
- Bright red light cannot knock any electrons off
- How can we explain this observation?
36Light can modeled as a stream of particles
- One explanation to the effects of light striking
a metal plate is so assume that the energy of
light is contained in small packets. - These packets are called photons
- Photons are particles of light
- They do not have mass
- They are more like little bundles of energy
- Unlike energy in a wave, the energy in a photon
is located in a particular place
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38The light model used depends on the situation
- Light can be modeled as either waves or
particles. - Some effects such as
- Interference of light are explained as waves
- Light exciting electrons off a metal plate are
explained as particles - The particle model can also explain how light can
travel across an empty space without a medium - Light can be considered to have a dual nature.
39Energy of light is proportional to frequency
- Remember light is a form of energy!
- Each photon of light carries a small amount of
energy. - The amount of this energy is proportional to the
frequency of the corresponding wavelength. - Photon of red light carries an amount of energy
that corresponds to the frequency of waves in red
light (4.5 x 1014 Hz)
40Speed of light depends on the medium
- In a vacuum, all light travels at the same speed
c - Speed of light is very large
- 3 x 108 m/s (186,000 mi/s)
- It is the fastest signal in the universe
- Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light
41Speed of light depends on the medium
- Light also travels through transparent mediums,
such as air, water, and glass - When passing through a medium, it travels slower
than it does in a vacuum.
42Brightness of light depends on intensity
- Intensity is the rate at which light or any other
form of energy flows through a given area of
space. - It depends on the amount of light or the number
of photons or waves - Intensity decreases as the light spreads out in
spherical wave fronts.
43Electromagnetic Spectrum
44Sunlight contains UV light
- The invisible light just beyond violet light
falls into the UV portion of the spectrum. - It has higher energy and shorter wavelengths than
visible light. - 9 of energy emitted by the sun is UV
- Due to the high energy, it can pass through thin
layers of clouds causing you to get a sunburn on
overcast days.
45X ray and gamma rays used in medicine
- X rays have wavelengths less than UV with higher
energy - Gamma rays have the highest electromagnetic
energy waves with the shortest wavelength - X rays are helpful in diagnostic in medicine but
can be dangerous to the body. - Both of these waves can kill living cells or turn
them into cancerous cells - Gamma rays can also be used to treat cancer by
killing the diseased cells.
46Infrared light can be felt as warmth
- Infrared (IR) light has wavelengths slightly
longer than red light - IR light from the sun or heat lamp warms you
- Used to keep food warm in restaurants without
continuing to cook it. - Devices and photographic film are sensitive to IR
light - You can detect IR radiation areas of different
temperature. Therefore, mapping the area
47Microwave for cooking and communication
- Microwaves are centimeters longer than IR waves
- Microwave are reflected by metals but easily
transmitted through air, glass, paper, and
plastic - Microwaves are also used to carry
telecommunication signals
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49Radio waves used in communications and radar
- Radio waves are longer than microwaves
- Radio waves range from 1/10th of a meter to
millions of meters - This portion includes TV signals, AM and FM radio
signals, and other radio waves
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51Radio waves used in communications and radar
- Air traffic control towers at airports use radar
to determine the locations of aircrafts - Antennas at the control tower emit radio waves,
or sometimes microwaves, out in all directions - When the signal reaches an airplane, a
transmitter on the plane sends another radio
signal back to the control tower indicating the
planes location and elevation above the ground.
52Radio waves used in communications and radar
- Radar is also used by police to monitor the speed
of vehicles - The radar gun fires a signal of known frequency
at a moving vehicle then measures the frequency
of the reflected waves - Because the vehicle is moving, the reflected
waves have a different frequency and use the
Doppler effect to determine the speed.
53Reflection and Color
54Reflection of Light
- A light ray is a model of light that represents
light traveling through space in an imaginary
straight line - It is the same as the direction of wave travel in
the wave model or the path of photons in the
particle model of light - Geometrical optics is the study of light in
circumstances where it behaves like a ray. - Using the light rays, the path of light can be
traced in ray diagrams
55Reflection
- When a light wave hits an object and bounces off
it is reflected - Law of Reflection angle of incidence angle of
reflection - Regular reflection reflection from a smooth
surface - Diffuse reflection reflection from a rough
surface
56Law of reflection
normal
57Mirrors
- Flat mirrors form virtual images from reflection
- Virtual image is an image that forms at a point
from which light rays appear to come but do not
actually come.
58Mirrors
- Curved mirrors can distort images
- Mirrors that bulge out are called convex mirrors
- Indented mirrors are called concave mirrors
59Concave mirrors create real images
- Concave mirrors are used to focus reflected light
- It can form one of two kinds of images
- A virtual image behind the mirror or a real image
in front of the mirror. - Real image is an image of an object formed by
many light rays coming together in a specific
location
60Telescope use curved surfaces to focus light
61Colors
- Determined by wavelengths of light an object
reflects - Objects appear white because they reflect all
colors - Objects appear black because they absorb all
colors
62Mixing colors
- Pigment colored material that absorbs some
colors and reflects other - Primary colors of light red, green, blue
- Primary pigments magenta, cyan, and yellow
63Mixing colors
- When mixing light, colors are additive they
combine to form white - When mixing pigment they are subtractive they
combine to form black
64Refraction, Lenses, and Prisms
65Refraction of Light
- Light changes speed when it passes from one
material to another -can cause light to bend - Index of refraction indicates how much light
slows down, the greater the index, the more light
slows down greater the index, the more the
bending
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67Total Internal Reflection
- Total internal reflection is the complete
reflection of light at the boundary between two
transparent mediums when the angle of incidence
exceeds the critical angle - Really due to refraction light strikes a surface
between two materials and is completely reflected
back into the first material - Used for fiber optics
68Fiber Optics
69Lenses
- Lenses rely on refraction
- Light traveling at an angle through a flat piece
of glass is refracted twice once when it enters
the glass and again when it reenters the air. - Lens are a transparent object that refracts light
rays, causing them to converge or diverge to
create an image - Converging lens bends light inward
- Diverging lens bends light outward
70Lenses can magnify images
- Magnification is a change in the size of an image
compared with the size of an object - It usually produces an image larger than the
object - - but not always!
71Eye depends on refraction and lenses
- Light enters the eye and is focused on the retina
- Retina is made of types of cells that absorb
light - Cones distinguish color and detailed shape
- Rods Good in dim light
- Color Blindness occurs when one or more sets of
cones dont work properly
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74Dispersion and Prisms
- Prisms separate white light into visible
spectrum based on ? - A prism is a transparent block with a triangular
cross section - Refraction of light through air of different
densities can cause a mirage
75Dispersion and Prisms
- Dispersion is an effect in which white light
separates into its component colors - The light separates into different colors because
of differences in the wave speed
76Rainbows
- Rainbows caused by water droplets refracting
white light - They are caused by the dispersion of the sun and
the reflection of water drops
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