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SOUND

SOUND . Chapter Twenty-Four: Sound. 24.1 Properties of Sound 24.2 Sound Waves 24.3 Sound Perception and Music. Chapter 24.1 Learning Goals. Describe properties of sound. Explain how sound waves are created and recorded. Discuss examples of the Doppler effect. Key Question:

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SOUND

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  1. SOUND

  2. Chapter Twenty-Four: Sound • 24.1 Properties of Sound • 24.2 Sound Waves • 24.3 Sound Perception and Music

  3. Chapter 24.1 Learning Goals • Describe properties of sound. • Explain how sound waves are created and recorded. • Discuss examples of the Doppler effect.

  4. Key Question: Does sound behave like other waves? Investigation 24A Properties of Sound

  5. 24.1 The frequency of sound • The pitch of a sound is how you hear and interpret its frequency. • A low-frequency sound has a low pitch. • A high-frequency sound has a high pitch. Each person is saying “Hello”.

  6. 24.1 The frequency of sound • Almost all the sounds you hear contain many frequencies at the same time. • Humans can generally hear frequencies between 20 Hz and 20,000 Hz.

  7. 24.1 The loudness of sound • The loudnessof a sound is measured in decibels (dB). • The decibelis a unit used to express relative differences in the loudness of sounds.

  8. 24.1 The loudness of sound • Most sounds fall between 0 and 100 on the decibel scale, making it a very convenient number to understand and use.

  9. 24.1 The frequency of sound • Sounds near 2,000 Hz seem louder than sounds of other frequencies, even at the same decibel level. • According to this curve, a 25 dB sound at 1,000 Hz sounds just as loud as an 40 dB sound at 100 Hz.

  10. 24.1 Amplitude and decibels • The amplitude of a sound increases ten times every 20-decibels.

  11. 24.1 The speed of sound • The speed of sound in normal air is 343 meters per second (660 miles per hour). • Sound travels through most liquids and solids faster than through air. • Sound travels about five times faster in water, and about 18 times faster in steel.

  12. 24.1 The speed of sound • Objects that move faster than sound are called supersonic. • If you were on the ground watching a supersonic plane fly toward you, there would be silence. • The sound would be behind the plane, racing to catch up.

  13. 24.1 The speed of sound • A supersonic jet “squishes” the sound waves so that a cone-shaped shock wave forms where the waves “pile up” ahead of the plane. • In front of the shock wave there is total silence.

  14. 24.1 The speed of sound • Passenger jets are subsonic because they travel at speeds from 400 to 500 mi/hr.

  15. 24.1 The Doppler effect • When the object is moving, the frequency will notbe the same to all listeners. • The shift in frequency caused by motion is called the Doppler effect. • You hear the Doppler effect when you hear a police or fire siren coming toward you, then going away from you.

  16. 24.1 Recording sound To record a sound you must store the pattern of vibrations in a way that can be replayed and be true to the original sound. • A microphone transforms a sound wave into an electrical signal with the same pattern of vibration.

  17. 24.1 Recording sound • An “analog to digital converter” converts the electrical signal to digital values between 0 and 65,536.

  18. 24.1 Recording sound • One second of compact-disc-quality sound is a list of 44,100 numbers which represents the amplitudes converted sounds.

  19. 24.1 Recording sound • To play the sound back, the string of numbers is read by a laser and converted into electrical signals again by a second circuit which reverses the process of the previous circuit.

  20. 24.1 Recording sound • The playback circuit converts the string of numbers back into an electrical signal. • The electrical signal is amplified to move the coil in a speaker and reproduce the sound.

  21. 24.1 Recording sound • Most of the music you listen to has been recorded in stereo. • The slight differences in how sound reaches your ears lets you know where sound is coming from.

  22. Chapter Twenty-Four: Sound • 24.1 Properties of Sound • 24.2 Sound Waves • 24.3 Sound Perception and Music

  23. Chapter 24.2 Learning Goals • Justify the classification of sound as a wave. • Analyze sound interactions at boundaries. • Explain how factors like temperature and pressure affect the behavior of sound waves.

  24. Key Question: How can resonance be controled to make the sounds we want? Investigation 24B Resonance in Other Systems

  25. 24.2 What is a sound wave? • Sound waves are pressure waveswith alternating high and low pressure regions. • When they are pushed by the vibrations, it creates a layer of higher pressure which results in a traveling vibration of pressure.

  26. 24.2 What is a sound wave? • At the same temperature and volume, higher pressure contains more molecules than lower pressure.

  27. 24.2 The wavelength of sound • The wavelength of sound in air is similar to the size of everyday objects.

  28. 24.2 The wavelength of sound • Wavelength is also important to sound. • Musical instruments use the wavelength of a sound to create different frequencies.

  29. 24.2 Standing waves • A wave that is confined in a space is called a standing wave. • A string with a standing wave is a kind of oscillator.

  30. 24.2 Standing waves • The lowest natural frequency is called the fundamental. • A vibrating string also has other natural frequencies called harmonics.

  31. 24.2 Standing waves • The place on a harmonic with the greatest amplitude is the antinode. • The place where the string does not move (least amplitude) is called a node.

  32. 24.2 Standing waves • It is easy to measure the wavelength of a standing wave on a string. • Two harmonics equals one wave!

  33. 24.2 Standing waves in pipes • A panpipe makes music as sound resonates in tubes of different lengths. • The natural frequency of a pipe is proportional to its length.

  34. 24.2 Standing waves in pipes • Because frequency and wavelength are inversely related, longer pipes have lower natural frequencies because they resonate at longer wavelengths. • A pipe that must vibrate at a frequency 2 times higher than another pipe must be 1/2 as long. If the long pipe has a frequency of 528 Hz, what is the frequency of the short pipe?

  35. 24.2 Standing waves in pipes • Blowing across the open end of a tube creates a standing wave inside the tube. • If we blow at just the right angle and we match the natural frequency of the material and the sound resonates (spreads).

  36. 24.2 Standing waves in pipes • The open end of a pipe is an open boundary to a standing wave and makes an antinode. • The pipe resonates to a certain frequency when its length is one-fourth the wavelength of that frequency.

  37. 24.2 Sound wave interactions • Like other waves, sound waves can be reflected by hard surfaces and refracted as they pass from one material to another. • Diffraction causes sound waves to spread out through small openings. • Carpet and soft materials can absorb sound waves.

  38. 24.2 Reverberation • The reflected sound and direct sound from the musicians together create a multiple echo called reverberation. • The right amount of reverberation makes the sound seem livelier and richer.

  39. Chapter Twenty-Four: Sound • 24.1 Properties of Sound • 24.2 Sound Waves • 24.3 Sound Perception and Music

  40. Chapter 24.3 Learning Goals • Explore how the brain makes meaning of sounds. • Describe how humans hear sounds. • Explain the sound is used to create music.

  41. 24.3 Sound perception and music • When you hear a sound, the nerves in your ear respond to more than 15,000 different frequencies at once. • The brain makes sense of complex sound because the ear separates the sound into different frequencies.

  42. 24.3 Sound perception and music • A frequency spectrum shows the amplitudes of different frequencies present in a sound.

  43. 24.3 Sonograms • More information is found in a sonogram which combines three sound variables: • frequency, • time, and • amplitude (loudness).

  44. 24.3 Sonograms Which letter represents a soft sound lasting 5 seconds? What is it’s frequency?

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