1 / 52

Vibrations and Waves

Vibrations and Waves. Chapter 12. Periodic Motion. A repeated motion is called periodic motion What are some examples of periodic motion? The motion of Earth orbiting the sun A child swinging on a swing Pendulum of a grandfather clock. Simple Harmonic Motion.

gypsy
Download Presentation

Vibrations and 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. Vibrations and Waves Chapter 12

  2. Periodic Motion • A repeated motion is called periodic motion • What are some examples of periodic motion? • The motion of Earth orbiting the sun • A child swinging on a swing • Pendulum of a grandfather clock

  3. Simple Harmonic Motion • Simple harmonic motion is a form of periodic motion • The conditions for simple harmonic motion are as follows: • The object oscillates about an equilibrium position • The motion involves a restoring force that is proportional to the displacement from equilibrium • The motion is back and forth over the same path

  4. Earth’s Orbit • Is the motion of the Earth orbiting the sun simple harmonic? • NO • Why not? • The Earth does not orbit about an equilibrium position

  5. p. 438 of your book • The spring is stretched away from the equilibrium position • Since the spring is being stretched toward the right, the spring’s restoring force pulls to the left so the acceleration is also to the left

  6. p. 438 of your book • When the spring is unstretched the force and acceleration are zero, but the velocity is maximum

  7. p.438 of your book • The spring is stretched away from the equilibrium position • Since the spring is being stretched toward the left, the spring’s restoring force pulls to the right so the acceleration is also to the right

  8. Damping • In the real world, friction eventually causes the mass-spring system to stop moving • This effect is called damping

  9. Mass-Spring Demo • http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=Masses_and_Springs • I suggest you play around with this demo…it might be really helpful!

  10. Hooke’s Law • The spring force always pushes or pulls the mass back toward its original equilibrium position • Measurements show that the restoring force is directly proportional to the displacement of the mass

  11. Hooke’s Law • Felastic= Spring force • k is the spring constant • x is the displacement from equilibrium • The negative sign shows that the direction of F is always opposite the mass’ displacement

  12. Flashback • Anybody remember where we’ve seen the spring constant (k) before? • PEelastic = ½kx2 • A stretched or compressed spring has elastic potential energy!!

  13. Spring Constant • The value of the spring constant is a measure of the stiffness of the spring • The bigger k is, the greater force needed to stretch or compress the spring • The units of k are N/m (Newtons/meter)

  14. Sample Problem p.441 #2 • A load of 45 N attached to a spring that is hanging vertically stretches the spring 0.14 m. What is the spring constant?

  15. Why do I make x negative? Because the displacement is down Solving the Problem

  16. Follow Up Question • What is the elastic potential energy stored in the spring when it is stretched 0.14 m?

  17. The simple pendulum • The simple pendulum is a mass attached to a string • The motion is simple harmonic because the restoring force is proportional to the displacement and because the mass oscillates about an equilibrium position

  18. Simple Pendulum • The restoring force is a component of the mass’ weight • As the displacement increases, the gravitational potential energy increases

  19. Simple Pendulum Activity • http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=Pendulum_Lab • You should also play around with this activity to help your understanding

  20. Comparison between pendulum and mass-spring system (p. 445)

  21. Measuring Simple Harmonic Motion (p. 447)

  22. Amplitude of SHM • Amplitude is the maximum displacement from equilibrium • The more energy the system has, the higher the amplitude will be

  23. Period of a pendulum • T = period • L= length of string • g= 9.81 m/s2

  24. Period of the Pendulum • The period of a pendulum only depends on the length of the string and the acceleration due to gravity • In other words, changing the mass of the pendulum has no effect on its period!!

  25. Sample Problem p. 449 #2 • You are designing a pendulum clock to have a period of 1.0 s. How long should the pendulum be?

  26. Solving the Problem

  27. Period of a mass-spring system • T= period • m= mass • k = spring constant

  28. Sample Problem p. 451 #2 • When a mass of 25 g is attached to a certain spring, it makes 20 complete vibrations in 4.0 s. What is the spring constant of the spring?

  29. What information do we have? • M= .025 kg • The mass makes 20 complete vibrations in 4.0s • That means it makes 5 vibrations per second • So f= 5 Hz • T= 1/5 = 0.2 seconds

  30. Solve the problem

  31. Day 2: Properties of Waves • A wave is the motion of a disturbance • Waves transfer energy by transferring the motion of matter instead of transferring matter itself • A medium is the material through which a disturbance travels • What are some examples of mediums? • Water • Air

  32. Two kinds of Waves • Mechanical Waves require a material medium • i.e. Sound waves • Electromagnetic Waves do not require a material medium • i.e. x-rays, gamma rays, etc

  33. Pulse Wave vs Periodic Wave • A pulse wave is a single, non periodic disturbance • A periodic wave is produced by periodic motion • Together, single pulses form a periodic wave

  34. Transverse Waves • Transverse Wave: The particles move perpendicular to the wave’s motion Particles move in y direction Wave moves in X direction

  35. Longitudinal (Compressional) Wave • Longitudinal (Compressional) Waves: Particles move in same direction as wave motion (Like a Slinky)

  36. Longitudinal (Compressional) Wave Crests: Regions of High Density because The coils are compressed Troughs: Areas of Low Density because The coils are stretched

  37. Wave Speed • The speed of a wave is the product of its frequency times its wavelength • f is frequency (Hz) • λ (lambda) Is wavelength (m)

  38. Sample Problem p.457 #4 • A tuning fork produces a sound with a frequency of 256 Hz and a wavelength in air of 1.35 m • a. What value does this give for the speed of sound in air? • b. What would be the wavelength of the wave produced b this tuning fork in water in which sound travels at 1500 m/s?

  39. Part a • Given: • f = 256 Hz • λ = 1.35 m • v = ?

  40. Part b • Given: • f = 256 Hz • v =1500 m/s • λ = ?

  41. Wave Interference • Since waves are not matter, they can occupy the same space at the same time • The combination of two overlapping waves is called superposition

  42. The Superposition Principle • The superposition principle: When two or more waves occupy the same space at the same time, the resultant wave is the vector sum of the individual waves

  43. Constructive Interference (p.460) • When two waves are traveling in the same direction, constructive interference occurs and the resultant wave is larger than the original waves

  44. Destructive Interference • When two waves are traveling on opposite sides of equilibrium, destructive interference occurs and the resultant wave is smaller than the two original waves

  45. Reflection • When the motion of a wave reaches a boundary, its motion is changed • There are two types of boundaries • Fixed Boundary • Free Boundary

  46. Free Boundaries • A free boundary is able to move with the wave’s motion • At a free boundary, the wave is reflected

  47. Fixed Boundaries • A fixed boundary does not move with the wave’s motion (pp. 462 for more explanation) • Consequently, the wave is reflected and inverted

  48. Standing Waves • When two waves with the same properties (amplitude, frequency, etc) travel in opposite directions and interfere, they create a standing wave.

  49. N N A N N N A A A N N N N A Standing Waves • Standing waves have nodes and antinodes • Nodes: The points where the two waves cancel • Antinodes: The places where the largest amplitude occurs • There is always one more node than antinode A

  50. Sample Problem p.465 #2 • A string is rigidly attached to a post at one end. Several pulses of amplitude 0.15 m sent down the string are reflected at the post and travel back down the string without a loss of amplitude. What is the amplitude at a point on the string where the maximum displacement points of two pulses cross? What type of interference is this?

More Related