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Doppler Effect. What sound do you hear when a car races by at the race track? Or when an ambulance/police car speeds by?. Key Question:. How does the sound from a moving object differ from that of a stationary object?. Doppler Effect.
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What sound do you hear when a car races by at the race track? Or when an ambulance/police car speeds by?
Key Question: • How does the sound from a moving object differ from that of a stationary object?
Doppler Effect • When a source of sound approaches an observer, the observed frequency increases • When the source moves away from the observer, the observed frequency decreases • When the source is stationary there is no change
Explanation: • Source is unmoving – all waves radiate evenly from centre
Observer as Train moves towards: • the source of the sound waves are traveling towards • crests are pushed closer together thus decreasing wavelength and increasing frequency
Observer as Train moves away: • the source of the sound waves is moving away • crests are stretched out behind thus increasing the wavelength and decreasing the frequency
The same effect is experienced when the source of the sound is stationary and the observer moves towards or away from the source with enough speed
Equation for Frequency Change fobs= fsource_v_ vvsource v = speed of sound in the medium (m/s) vs = speed of the source through medium(how fast the source is moving) v + vs – used when source is moving away from observer v – vs – used when source is moving towards observer
Sample Problem An ambulance races down Bramalea Road at 85 km/h with its siren blazing. The siren has a frequency of 456 Hz and the temperature of the air is 15oC. What is the frequency of the sound waves as they reach the students at Bramalea S.S. a.) as the ambulance approaches? b.) after it has passed the students?
Thinking Question • If Harsh is screaming and you are going to help him. As you run towards Harsh, will the frequency of his scream sound higher or lower?
Applications • Astronomers: speed of stars • Police radar • Tracking satellites/weather systems • Baseball pitch – measure speed • Infrared detectors for home security
Supersonic Travel • Subsonic speeds – speed less than that of sound in air • Supersonic – speed greater than the speed of sound in air
Mach Number • Mach 1 is the the speed of sound • the ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of sound in air • Mach number = speed of object speed of sound
Sample Problem • If the temperature outside is -20C and a plane is flying at 900m/s, at what mach number is the plane flying?
Supersonic Speed • When flying at the speed of sound, the waves in front of the object pile up, producing an area of very dense air, or intense compression – Sound Barrier • extra thrust is required to "break through" this "wall" of air
sound waves left behind the object interfere constructively in a cone shape – creates a sonic boom • an object must be specially designed to with stand the vibrations incurred when going through the sound barrier