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Learn about mechanical waves, transverse waves, longitudinal waves, sound waves, wave properties, wave speed, frequency, amplitude, behavior of waves, reflection, refraction, diffraction, interference, standing waves.
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Mechanical Waves and Sound Chapter 17 Physical Science
Mechanical Waves 17-1
17-1 Learning Targets • Compare and contrast the three types of mechanical waves
Mechanical Waves • A disturbance in matter that carries energy from one place to another • Require a medium • Medium- material through which a wave travels • Solid, liquid, or gas • All waves except electromagnetic waves
Mechanical Waves • Created when a source of energy causes a vibration to travel though a medium • 3 types: Longitudinal, transvers, and surface
Transverse Waves • Wave moves horizontally from left to right • Medium moves at right angles compared to the direction of the wave
Crest- highest point of transverse wave • Trough-lowest point of transverse wave
Longitudinal Wave • Vibration of the medium is parallel to the direction the wave travels • Like a spring • Made of alternating compressions and rarefactions • Sound Waves • P waves produced by earthquakes
Compression-particles in medium spaced closed together • Rarefaction- particles in medium are spread out
Surface Waves • A wave that travels along a surface separating two media • Objects move in circular pattern due to combination of movement ( from transverse and longitudinal like wave)
https://www.acs.psu.edu/drussell/demos/waves/wavemotion.html
Properties of Waves 17-2
17-2 Learning Targets • Determine how frequency, wavelength, and speed are related. • Determine how amplitude and energy are related.
Periodic motion • - motion that repeat at regular time intervals • Pendulums • Period- time required for one cycle • complete motion that returns to its starting point
Frequency • Number of full wavelengths that pass a point in a given amount of time • Measures how rapidly vibrations occur in the medium or source of wave • Symbol is f • SI unit for frequency is Hertz (Hz) – vibrations per second
Wavelength • Distance between two neighboring crests or troughs in transverse wave • Distance between two neighboring compressions or rarefactions in a longitudinal wave • λ (lambda)
Wavelength is indirectly related to frequency • As Frequency increases, wavelength decreases
Wave Speed • Wave velocity (v)= frequency (f) x wavelength(λ) • (m/s) (waves/ s) (m/wave) • v= fλ • Period • T= 1/f
Wave Speed Problem • The average wavelength in a series of ocean waves is 15.0 m. A wave crest arrives at the shore on average every 10s, so the frequency is 0.100 Hz. What is the average speed of the waves? • v= fλ • V= 0.1 Hz x 15.0 m • V= 1.50 m/s
The speed of sound in air is about 340 m/s. What is the wavelength of a sound wave with a frequency of 220 Hz? • v= fλ • rearrange to find λ = v/ f • λ= 340 m/s 220 Hz • λ= 1.7 m
What is the period of a 5.2 Hz wave? • T= 1/f • T= 1/ 5.2 Hz • T= 0.19 s
Amplitude • The maximum displacement of the medium from its rest position • Transverse wave = vertical distance between the line of origin and crest or trough • Longitudinal wave= difference in pressure between maximum compression and resting state
Amplitude and energy is direct relationship • The more energy a wave has, the greater the amplitude
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVsdXKO9xlk • http://onlinetonegenerator.com/hearingtest.html
Behavior of Waves 17-3
17-3 Learning Targets • Describe reflection • Describe refraction • Describe factors that affect diffraction • Describe two types of interference • Describe what will make standing waves
Reflection • Occurs when a wave bounces off a surface that is cannot pass through • Does not change speed or frequency of wave • Wave may be flipped upside down • Transverse wave – if hits fixed boundary the reflected wave is upside down compared to original wave
Refraction • Bending of light waves as they pass from one medium to another • Due to changing speed of wave (one side of wave moves more slowly than other side) • Objects may appear to be bent if light waves
Diffraction • Bending of a wave as it moves around an obstacle or through a narrow opening • Longer wavelengths are better at bending • Think of radio waves
Wave Interference • Mechanical waves are not matter, but displacement of matter. • Two wave can occupy the same space at the same time • Known as principle of superposition • Superposition principle is the method of summing the displacement of waves • When two or more waves travel through a medium, the resultant wave is the sum of the displacements of the individual waves at each point
Constructive interference • 2 or more waves combine to make a resulting wave bigger than the original waves • New wave has greater amplitude • Crests align with crests
Destructive interference • 2 or more waves combine so the resulting wave is smaller than the largest original wave • Complete destructive interference is when two pulses completely cancel each other • Crests align with troughs
Standing wave • A wave that appears to stay in one place • Combination of two waves moving in opposite directions • Each having the same amplitude and frequency • Interference of reflected wave on self • Plucked strings
Standing wave forms only if half wavelength or a multiple of half a wavelength fits exactly into the length of a vibrating cord Or if frequency is doubled or triples
Standing Waves • Node- point on standing wave that has no displacement • Antinode- point where crest or trough occurs midway between two nodes
Sound and Hearing 17-4
What affects the speed of sound? • 1- Medium • Density • sounds moves best through more dense materials • Material • sounds travel fastest through solids and slowest through gases • 2-Temperature • increase in temperature= increase in sound speed
Intensity • Rate at which a wave’s energy fowls through a given area