1 / 43

Vibrations and Waves

Vibrations and Waves. Chapter 11. Simple Harmonic Motion. Chapter 11 Section 1. Periodic Motion. Any repetitive, or cyclical, types of motion Examples? Simple Harmonic Motion is a specialized form of periodic motion. Simple Harmonic Motion.

lamar
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 11

  2. Simple Harmonic Motion Chapter 11 Section 1

  3. Periodic Motion • Any repetitive, or cyclical, types of motion • Examples? • Simple Harmonic Motion is a specialized form of periodic motion

  4. Simple Harmonic Motion • Periodic vibration about an equilibrium position • Restoring force must be • proportional to displacement from equilibrium • in the direction of equilibrium

  5. Restoring Force • The push or pull that brings the mass back towards equilibrium • for a pendulum it is a component of the bob’s weight. • for a mass-spring system it is tension from the stretch (or compression) of the spring as described by Hooke’s Law F = -kx

  6. Simple Harmonic Motion • Common examples include: • mass-spring system • pendulum for small angles

  7. Virtual Simple Harmonic Motion • http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=Pendulum_Lab • http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=Masses_and_Springs

  8. Measuring Simple Harmonic Motion Chapter 11 Section 2

  9. Amplitude • The maximum displacement from equilibrium.

  10. Period • The time it takes for one complete cycle of motion. • Represented by the symbol T • Unit of seconds

  11. Frequency • The number of cycles completed in a unit of time (usually seconds) • Represented by the symbol f • Unit of s-1 (also known as Hertz)

  12. Period and Frequency • Period and frequency are inversely related. • f = 1/T and T = 1/f

  13. A mass-spring system vibrates exactly 10 times each second. What is its period and frequency? f = 10 cycles per second = 10 Hz T = 1/f = 1/10 s = 0.1 s

  14. Factors Affecting Pendulums • For small amplitudes, the period of a pendulum does not depend on the mass or amplitude. • Length and acceleration due to gravity do affect the period of a pendulum.

  15. Factors Affecting Mass-Spring Systems • The heavier the mass, the longer the period (more inertia) • The stiffer the spring, the less time it will take to complete one cycle.

  16. Properties of Waves Chapter 11 Section 3

  17. What is a wave? • A wave is an means by which energy is transferred from one place to another via periodic disturbances

  18. Some general terminology… • Pulse – a single disturbance, single cycle • Periodic wave – continuous, repeated disturbances • Sine wave – a wave whose source vibrates with simple harmonic motion • Medium – whatever the wave is traveling through

  19. Mechanical Waves • Waves that require a physical medium to travel through. • Examples: sound, disturbance in a slinky • Examples of physical media are water, air, string, slinky.

  20. Electromagnetic waves • Waves that do not require a physical medium. • Comprised of oscillating electric and magnetic fields • Examples include x-rays, visible light, radio waves, etc.

  21. Transverse Waves • Particles of the medium move perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer • You should be able to identify crests, troughs, wavelength (distance traveled during one full cycle), and amplitude Crest Trough

  22. Longitudinal Waves • Particles of the medium move parallel to the direction of energy transfer (slinky demo) • Be able to Identify compressions, rarefactions, wavelengths Compressions Rarefactions

  23. Waves transfer energy • Note that, while energy is transferred from point A to point B, the particles in the medium do not move from A to B. • Individual particles of the medium merely vibrate back and forth in simple harmonic motion • The rate of energy transfer is proportional to the square of the amplitude • When amplitude is doubled, the energy carried increases by a factor of 4.

  24. Wave speed • Wave speed is determined completely by the characteristics of the medium • For an unchanging medium, wave speed is constant • Calculate speed of a wave by multiplying wavelength by frequency. • v = f x λ

  25. Practice #1 • Q: Microwaves travel at the speed of light, 3.00108 m/s. When the frequency of microwaves is 9.00 109 Hz, what is their wavelength? • A: 0.0300 m

  26. Practice #2 • Q: The piano string tuned to middle C vibrates with a frequency of 264 Hz. Assuming the speed of sound in air is 343 m/s, find the wavelength of the sound waves produced by the string. • A: 1.30 m

  27. 11.3 Problems • Page 387 1-4

  28. Wave Interactions Chapter 11 Section 4

  29. Interference • The combination of two or more waves in a medium at the same time. • Matter cannot occupy the same space at the same time, but energy can. • The Superposition Principle describes what happens when waves interfere… • Waves (energy) pass through each other completely unaffected • The medium will be displaced an amount equal to the vector sum of what the waves would have done individually

  30. Constructive Interference • Waves are on the same side of equilibrium. • Waves meet, combine according to the superposition principle, and pass through unchanged. • Amplitude larger than originals

  31. Destructive Interference • pulses on opposite sides of equilibrium. • Waves meet, combine according to the superposition principle, and pass through unchanged. • Amplitude smaller than at least one original wave

  32. Complete Destructive Interference

  33. Interference patterns • Interference patterns result from continuous interference. • Check it out!

  34. Reflection • The bouncing of a wave when it encounters the boundary between two different media

  35. Fixed End Reflection • At a fixed boundary, waves are inverted as they are reflected.

  36. Free End Reflection • At a free boundary, waves are reflected on the same side of equilibrium

  37. Standing Waves • A wave interference pattern that results when two waves of the same frequency, wavelength, and amplitude travel in opposite directions and interfere.

  38. Standing wave parts • Node – point that maintains zero displacement • Antinode – point at which largest displacement occurs

  39. Standing waves • Only certain frequencies produce standing wave patterns.

  40. If a string is 4.0 m long, what are three wavelengths that will produce standing waves on this string?

More Related