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Chapter 13

Chapter 13. Sound. Section 1. Electromagnetic waves made by vibrating electric charges and can travel through space. Electric and magnetic fields related forces operate even in empty space Moving electric charge creates magnetic field

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Chapter 13

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  1. Chapter 13 Sound

  2. Section 1

  3. Electromagnetic waves • made by vibrating electric charges and can travel through space. • Electric and magnetic fields • related forces operate even in empty space • Moving electric charge creates magnetic field • Changing magnetic fields create changing electric fields and vice versa. • Electromagnetic waves • produced when an electric charge is vibrating • Vibrating electric charges are surrounded by vibrating electric and magnetic fields

  4. Properties of Electromagnetic fields • carry radiant energy • as frequency increases, wavelength decreases • Frequency • number of vibrations per second • measured in hertz • Wavelength • is the distance from one crest to another • measured in meters • Wave speed • the vacuum of space, 300,000 km/s • electromagnetic waves slow as they travel through matter

  5. Waves and particles • Difference is still not clear • Light can behave as a particle or wave • Know as duality • Photon • Particle of light whose energy depends on frequency • All particles can behave like a wave

  6. Section 2

  7. Electromagnetic spectrum • Entire range of electromagnetic wave frequencies • Radio waves • low-frequency electromagnetic waves with wavelengths from less than a cm to about 1000 m • Microwaves • radio wave lengths of about 1 to 10 cm • Radar • radio waves bounced off an object to determine its speed and location • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) • radio waves produce an image of inside the body

  8. Infrared waves • slightly higher frequency than radio waves • people feel it as thermal energy or warmth • Visible light • wavelengths between ~390 to 770 billionth of a meter • can be seen with the eye • Ultraviolet waves • Have frequencies slightly higher than visible light; can damage skin • Ultraviolet light • can kill bacteria • can be absorbed by some fluorescent materials and released as visible light • Ozone layer • absorbs most of the Sun’s harmful ultraviolet waves.

  9. X rays and gamma rays • ultra-high-frequency electromagnetic waves that can travel through matter, break molecular bonds & damage cells • X rays • used to provide images of bones and to examine suitcases at airports without opening them. • Radiation therapy • used to kill diseased cells

  10. Section 3

  11. Radio transmission • radio converts electromagnetic waves into sound waves • Carrier wave • specific frequency which radio station is assigned • AM radio • broadcast by varying amplitude of carrier wave • frequencies range from 540 to 1,600 thousand vibrations per second • FM radio • transmit by varying frequency of carrier wave • frequencies range from 88 million to 108 million vibrations per second

  12. Television • sounds and images changed into electronic signals broadcast by carrier waves • Audio • sent by FM radio waves • Video • sent by AM signals • Cathode-ray tube • A sealed vacuum chamber with a coated screen that receives electron beams to provide images

  13. Telephones • microphone converts sound waves into electrical signal • Cell phone • electrical signal creates a radio wave that is transmitted to and from a microwave tower • Cordless phone • transceiversends one radio signal & receives another at different frequency from base unit • Pagers • radio receiver on which a message is left

  14. Communication satellites • high frequency microwave signal is transmitted to a satellite • satellite amplifies it and returns it to Earth at a different frequency • Satellite telephone systems • mobile phones transmit radio signals to a satellite • satellite relays them back to a ground station that passes the call into the telephone network • Television satellites • uses microwaves rather than longer-wavelength radio wave • ground receiver dish focuses the microwave beam onto an antenna

  15. Global positioning system • system of satellites, ground stations, and receivers that provide information about the receiver’s location on or above the Earth’s surface • G.P.S.

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