1 / 16

Waves

Waves. Chapter 11 Section 1. What is a wave ?. A wave is a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space Waves transfer energy NOT matter Medium : the matter through which a wave travels ; i.e. water, air. Motion of a Duck on a Wave. Water Wave.

fleur
Download Presentation

Waves

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Waves Chapter 11 Section 1

  2. What is a wave? • A wave is a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space • Waves transfer energy NOT matter • Medium: the matter through which a wave travels; i.e. water, air

  3. Motion of a Duck on a Wave

  4. Water Wave

  5. Mechanical Waves • Waves that can travel only through matter • There are two types: • Transverse waves(water, and some seismic waves) • Longitudinal waves(sound, spring) • Requires a medium!!!!!!!

  6.   particle motion     wave motion   Longitudinal (compressional) Waves • Particles in the medium move parallel to the direction of the waves. The dense areas are called compressions. The less dense areas are rarefactions.

  7. Transverse Waves Particles in the medium move perpendicular to the direction of the waves. wave motion particlemotion

  8. Parts of a Wave • Crest:the highest point (top) of a transverse wave. • Trough:the lowest point (bottom)of a transverse wave. • Wavelength:the distance from any point on a wave to the same point on the next wave. (ex: crest to crest) • Amplitude:the height measured from the resting position.

  9. Parts of a Wave crest wavelength amplitude trough

  10. Seismic Waves Seismic waves are a combination of compressional and transverse waves 1. They can travel along the earth’s surface 2.When objects on the Earth’s surface absorb some of the energy carried by seismic waves, they move and shake Compressional Transverse

  11. AMPLITUDE Measures the amount of energy in a wave. Greater amplitude = more energy.

  12. FREQUENCY The rate at which waves pass (the # of full wavelengths that pass a point in one second). Symbol: f Unit: Hertz (Hz) 1 Hertz = 1 vibration per second Frequency is 1 / T

  13. WAVE SPEED How fast a wave moves. Symbol: vUnit: m/s Wave speed is determined by the medium.Generally, waves pass through solids faster b/c particles are closer and can pass vibrations to each other more quickly.

  14. EQUATIONS Wave speed = frequency times wavelength v = f ·λ f = v / λ λ = v / f UNITS: λ = meters (m) f = Hertz (Hz) v = m/s v f λ

  15. The string of a piano that produces the note middle C vibrates with a frequency of 264 Hz. If the sound waves produces have a wavelength of 1.30 m in air, what is the speed of sound in air? f = 264 Hz λ = 1.30 m v = ? v = 264 Hz (1.30 m) v = f · λ v = 343.2 m/s

  16. A water wave has a speed of 1.3 m/s. A person sitting on a pier observes that it takes 1.2 s for a full wavelength to pass the edge of the pier. What is the wavelength of the water wave? v = 1.3 m/s T = 1.2 s f = 1 / T = 1 / 1.2 s = 0.83 Hz λ = ? λ = 1.3 m/s / 0.83 Hz λ = v / f λ = 1.57 m

More Related