Title: Waves and Sound
1Waves and Sound
2Transferring Energy Without Transferring Matter
- Vibrating bodies connected to their environment
will transfer energy to the environment. - The vibrations are then transferred though the
environment from neighbor to neighbor. - This energy transfer is called wave motion.
- Wave motion moves energy through a medium without
moving the whole medium. - Only the shape or form of wave travels, not the
medium.
3Definition of wave
- A periodic disturbance which travels through a
medium from one point in space to the others.
Wave motion means the propagation of waves
through a medium.
4TYPES OF WAVESWaves are classified into
different types according to their natures
5Three types of waves
- Mechanical waves require a material medium to
travel (air, water, ropes). - Electromagnetic waves do not require a medium to
travel (light, radio). - Matter waves are produced by electrons and
particles.
6Electromagnetic Waves
- Material medium is not essential for propagation.
e/m waves travel through vacuum. - Disturbance of electric and magnetic fields
traveling through space. - All electromagnetic waves are transverse waves.
7Electromagnetic Waves
- Light Waves
- Radio Waves
- X-Rays
- No Medium Required
- Travels At The Speed Of Light
- 3 X 108 m/s in a vacuum
- Cannot Be Observed
8Matter Waves
- Matter is in the form of particles.
- Energy is in the form of waves.
- Energy can be quantized and matter can have a
wavelength. - Matter displays wavelike properties.
9Mechanical Waves
- Transverse waves cause the medium to move
perpendicular to the direction of the wave. - Longitudinal waves cause the medium to move
parallel to the direction of the wave. - Surface waves are both transverse waves and
longitudinal waves mixed in one medium. (Such as
water waves) - Torsional waves produce a twisting motion through
the medium such as the ones which caused the
collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.
103 Types of Mechanical Waves
11Transverse Wave
12Transverse Waves
- These waves cause particles of a medium to
vibrate perpendicular to the direction of motion - The waveform appears in the shape of sine curve.
13Longitudinal Waves
- These waves cause medium to vibrate in a
direction parallel to the direction of motion.
14Longitudinal Waves
- Speaker membrane expands, creating a region where
the air molecules are packed closely together, a
"condensation". The air pressure in a
condensation is higher than normal. - As the membrane moves back, a regionis left
behind where few molecules are located, a
"rarefaction". Meanwhile, thecondensation moves
forward.
15Surface Waves
- Waves out on the ocean's surface are a
combination of transverse and longitudinal waves.
- The wave height is the distance from a trough to
a peak and the wavelength is the peak to peak
distance. - When the wave height is
1/7 the wavelength
the wave breaks.
16Tacoma Narrows BridgeTorsional Oscillation
17Period T Frequency f
- The PERIOD is the time for a particle of the
medium to complete one oscillation. - The SI unit for period is the second
- The FREQUENCY of is the number of cycles per unit
time. - The frequency of a wave is equal to the number of
waves that pass a particular point in one second. - The unit is Hertz (Hz) which is a cycle per
second. - FREQUENCY is also the reciprocal of the period.
18Period and Frequency
19Amplitude A
- The AMPLITUDE of a wave is the maximum distance
of a particle from the equilibrium position. - The SI unit for amplitude is meter
20Amplitude A
- The energy content of a wave is indicated by the
amplitude. - Two waves of the same frequency can have
different amplitudes. - The greater the amplitude, the more work a wave
can do. - Amplitude does not affect wavelength, frequency
or velocity
21Wavelength ?
- The WAVELENGTH of a wave is the length of one
complete cycle. - It is the distance between two consecutive in
phase points. - In phase points are those that are moving in step
with each other.
22Comparing waves
23Wave Velocity
- The speed of a wave is the product of the waves
frequency and wavelength. - The speed does not depend on amplitude or
frequencyit depends on the properties of the
medium. - Sound waves depend on temperature of the air and
water waves depend on depth of water.
24Do you remember..?
- 4. The periodic wave in the diagram below has a
frequency of 40. hertz. - What is the speed of the wave?
- a. 13 m/s b. 60. m/s c. 27 m/s d.
120 m/s
25More to remember..
- Austin drops a stone into a dry well 175 m deep.
How long, after he drops the stone, does he hear
it hit the bottom of the shaft? - The speed of sound waves is 340 m/s.
- Assume g 10 m/s/s
26Warm up
- Sitting on the beach I notice the waves motion .
I see a crest pass me every 2 seconds. The crests
are - 3 meters apart. What is the waves velocity?
27Waves and Sound
28Waves and Boundaries
- When a wave encounters an interface (boundary),
it may be reflected and/or transmitted! - An incident wave goes into a new medium as a
transmitted wave and bounces back as a reflected
wave. - Density difference determines how much of the
wave is transmitted and how much is reflected.
29Waves and Boundaries
- Small Difference Between the Densities of the two
Media - Most of wave is transmitted.
- Amplitude of transmitted wave will be greater
than amplitude of reflected wave. - Large Difference Between the Densities of the two
Media - Most of incident wave is reflected.
- Amplitude of reflected wave is greater than
amplitude of transmitted wave.
30Less Dense to More Dense Medium
- When a wave hits the boundary of a more dense
medium, the reflected wave is inverted.
31More dense to a Less Dense Medium
- When a wave hits the boundary of a less dense
medium, the reflected wave is erect.
32Reflection of Waves
- A traveling wave is reflected when it hits a
barrier. - This phenomenon can easily be observed when a
traveling water wave hits a reflector in the
ripple tank.
Reflector
Reflected waves
33Law of Reflection
- When an incident wave encounters a boundary at an
angle, ?, from the normal, its reflected wave
will be reflected at the same angle from the
normal.
34Do you remember???
- What is a boundary?
- What determines the speed of a wave?
- What happens to a wave hitting a boundary?
- How do you know if a wave will reflect erect or
inverted? - What does not change at a boundary?
- What must change at a boundary?
35When a wave passes into a new medium
- Its wavelength changes
- Its speed changes with density
- Its frequency remains the same
36Refraction
- Refraction is the bending of a wave as it passes
from one medium to another medium of different
propagation speed.
37The Densities of the Media
- If the light passes from a less dense to a more
dense medium, it bends toward the normal. - If the light passes from a more dense to a less
dense medium, it bends away from the normal.
38Refraction of Waves
- The speed of a water wave increases with depth.
- This change in speed is accompanied by
refraction.
39Diffraction
- Diffraction is the spreading of a wave
disturbance around and beyond the edge of a
barrier. - When a traveling water wave hits an obstacle, the
wave fronts spreads out round the edge and
becomes curved. - The wavelength of the wave is not changed in
diffraction.
40Superposition Principle
- Wave interference occurs when two or more waves
act simultaneously on a medium. - Whenever two or more waves pass through each
other, the resulting disturbance at a given point
in the medium may usually be found by adding the
individual displacements that each wave would
have caused. (Principle of Superposition)
41Principle of Superposition
- The displacement of a medium caused by two or
more waves is the algebraic sum of the
displacements caused by the individual waves. - When colliding waves combine (add) the result can
either be bigger or smaller than the original
waves. - The waves add constructively or destructively
depending on the relative sign of each wave.
42Superposition Interference
- Consider two harmonic waves A and B meeting at x
0. - The displacement versus time for each is shown
below
43Constructive Interference
44Constructive Interference
- Occurs when wave displacements are in phase.
- Two waves combine to create a larger wave.
- Constructive interference occurs when the waves
are trying to displace the medium in the same
direction. - More than one wave can occupy the same space at
the same time.
45Destructive Interference
- Occurs when wave displacements are opposite in
phase. - One wave cancels the other out.
46Destructive Interference
- When these two waves are completely overlapping,
there will be complete destructive interference. - Destructive interference occurs when the waves
are trying to displace the medium in opposite
directions.
47Before and AfterWaves have the ability to pass
through one another and not change.
48Waves Moving in and Out of Phase
- When the 2 waves are in phase, the resulting
disturbance has a maximum amplitude. - When the 2 waves are out of phase, the resulting
disturbance has a minimum amplitude.
49Interference in Water Waves
50Standing Wave in Action
- Nodes are places on a standing wave that do not
appear to move. - Antinodes are places on a standing wave that are
the greatest displacement from equilibrium.
51Standing Waves
- Waves traveling in opposite directions, with the
same frequency, wavelength, and amplitude,
produce a standing wave.