what is a wave? a wave is the motion of a disturbance

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What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance.

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Page 1: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

What is a wave?A wave is the motion of a disturbance.

Page 2: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

What is a wave?The medium is the physical

environment through which a disturbance can travel.

A mechanical wave is a wave that requires a medium.

Some waves do not require a medium; electromagnetic waves are an example that we will study later.

Page 3: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Types of wavesPulse wave: A wave that consists of a

single traveling pulse.Periodic wave: created by continuously

generated pulses from one end of the rope.

Page 4: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Types of wavesA wave whose source vibrates with

simple harmonic motion is a sine wave.

Page 5: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Types of wavesA transverse wave is a wave whose

particles vibrate perpendicularly to the direction the wave is traveling.

equilibrium

Page 6: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave CharacteristicsCrest: the highest point above the

equilibrium position.

Page 7: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave CharacteristicsTrough: the lowest point below the

equilibrium position.

Page 8: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave CharacteristicsWavelength: the distance between two

adjacent similar points of a wave◦crest to crest◦trough to trough

Page 9: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave CharacteristicsAmplitude: the maximum displacement

from equilibrium.◦Crest to equilibrium◦Trough to equilibrium

Page 10: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Types of wavesA longitudinal wave is a wave whose

particles vibrate in parallel to the direction the wave is traveling.

Page 11: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Types of waves

Page 12: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave characteristicsWave speed

Page 13: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave characteristicsWaves transfer energyThe rate of that transfer depends on the

amplitude at which the particles of the medium are vibrating.◦The greater the amplitude, the more energy

the wave carries.Damping occurs when that energy

diminishes over time.◦We disregard damping in many of our

problems.

Page 14: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave characteristicsThe energy transferred is proportional

to the square of the wave’s amplitude

Page 15: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave InterferenceTwo waves can occupy the same space

at the same time.The overlapping of two waves is called

superposition.

Page 16: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave InterferenceDisplacements in the same direction:

constructive interference.

Page 17: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave InterferenceDisplacements in opposite direction:

destructive interference.

Page 18: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave InterferenceWhat happens when waves hit a

boundary?◦Waves are reflected at a free boundary◦Waves are reflected and inverted at a fixed

boundary.

Page 19: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Wave InterferenceA standing wave is a wave pattern that

results when two waves of the same frequency, wavelength and amplitude travel in opposite directions and interfere.◦A node is a point in a standing wave that

maintains zero displacement.◦An antinode is a point in a standing wave

halfway between two notes at which the largest displacement occurs.

Page 20: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave ProductionSound waves are longitudinal.Compression: the region of a

longitudinal wave in which the density and pressure are at a maximum.

Rarefaction: The region of a longitudinal wave in which the density and pressure are at a minimum.

Page 21: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave ProductionSound waves are longitudinal because

vibrations of air molecules are parallel to the direction of wave motion.

Page 22: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave ProductionTuning fork

Page 23: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave ProductionTuning fork

Page 24: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave CharacteristicsFrequency (cycles per second)◦Low frequency = long wavelength◦High frequency = short wavelength

Page 25: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave CharacteristicsPitch: a measure of how high or low a

sound is perceived to be, depending on the frequency of the sound wave.

Page 26: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave CharacteristicsSound can travel through solids, liquids

or gases.◦Waves consist of vibrating particles.◦Sound travels much more quickly through a

solid than a gas because the molecules are closer together.

Page 27: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave Characteristics

Page 28: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave CharacteristicsSound speed depends upon the

medium as we just saw. Sound speed also depends upon the

temperature of the medium.As temperature increases, gas particles

collide more frequently so sound can travel faster.

Temperature has a negligible effect on liquids or solids.

Page 29: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound Wave CharacteristicsSound waves propagate in three

dimensions.We assume a spherical wave front for

our purposes.

Wave fronts

** Distance between wave fronts equals one wavelength

Page 30: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves on a string

Page 31: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves on a string Fundamental frequency: the lowest

possible frequency of vibration of a standing wave.

Page 32: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves on a string

These frequencies form the harmonic series.

Page 33: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves on a string Harmonic series: a series of

frequencies that includes the fundamental frequency and integral multiples of the fundamental frequency.

Page 34: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves on a string Harmonic series of standing waves on

a vibrating string:

** Note: v is the speed of the waves on the string, not in the air.

Page 35: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves in a pipeIf both ends of the pipe are open, all

harmonics are present.

v = the speed of sound in the pipeL = length of pipe

Page 36: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves in a pipeIf one ends of the pipe is closed, only

odd harmonics are present.

v = the speed of sound in the pipeL = length of pipe

Page 37: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves in a pipeBeat: the periodic variation in the

amplitude of a wave that is the superposition of two waves of slightsly different frequencies.

Page 38: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Standing Waves in a pipeThe number of beats per second

corresponds to the difference between frequencies.◦Two flute players could use beats to tune

their instrument. They would play the same note and one flute would be adjusted until no beats are heard, meaning the two flutes would be in tune.

Page 39: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityIntensity is the rate at which energy

flows through a unit area perpendicular to the direction of wave motion.

Page 40: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityIntensity of a spherical wave:

Page 41: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityIn combination, frequency and

intensity determine which sounds are audible.

Page 42: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityRelative intensity: the ratio of the

intensity of a given sound wave to the intensity at the threshold of hearing.

Page 43: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityThere is a logarithmic dependence of

perceived loudness on intensity.Loudness is measured according to a

decibel level.A decibel is a dimensionless unit that is

proportional to the log of a ratio using the threshold of hearing.

Page 44: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

Sound IntensityIntensity (W/m2) Decibel Level (dB) Example

1.0x10-12 0 Threshold of hearing

1.0x10-11 10 Rustling leaves

1.0x10-10 20 Quiet whisper

1.0x10-9 30 Whisper

1.0x10-8 40 Mosquito buzzing

1.0x10-7 50 Normal conversation

1.0x10-6 60 Air conditioner at 6 m

1.0x10-5 70 Vacuum cleaner

1.0x10-4 80 Busy traffic

1.0x10-3 90 Lawn mower

1.0x10-1 110 Auto horn at 1 m

1.0x100 120 Threshold of pain

1.0x101 130 Machine gun

1.0x103 150 Jet plane

Page 45: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

ResonanceNatural frequency: the frequency at

which a system tends to oscillate in the absence of any driving or damping force.

Resonance: a phenomena that occurs when the frequency of a force applied to a system matches the natural frequency of vibration of the system, resulting in a large amplitude of vibration.

Page 46: What is a wave? A wave is the motion of a disturbance

ResonanceNatural frequency: the frequency at

which a system tends to oscillate in the absence of any driving or damping force.

Resonance: a phenomena that occurs when the frequency of a force applied to a system matches the natural frequency of vibration of the system, resulting in a large amplitude of vibration.