Title: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVkdfJ9PkRQ (Pendulum)
1- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyVkdfJ9PkRQ
(Pendulum)
2Waves
- Most information reaches us as a form of wave.
- Light (electromagnetic), sound, radio/television
(electromagnetic) - When energy is transferred by a wave from a
vibrating source to a receiver, there is no
transfer of matter between the two points. - When you cause a ripple in a pond, the wave
disturbance moves, not the water when the ripple
passes,the water is in the same spot as it was
prior to the disturbance. - The energy transferred from a vibrating source to
a receiver is carried by a disturbance in a
medium. - When you speak, the air molecules dont move away
from you like a wind they simply pass on the
disturbance.
3Great Sound demos on Sound disc!!!!!
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v44kdfyN9ws4NR1
(water balloon ping pong ball)
4Vibrations and Waves
- A wave is a disturbance that carries energy thru
matter or space. - A vibration provides the energy for waves - the
bigger the vibration, the bigger the wave. - A vibration cannot exist in one instant, but
needs time to move to and fro. - A wiggle in time
- As waves carry energy along, they spread that
energy over a large area - the farther away you
are from the vibration, the less you are affected
by it. - Ex Homes near an epicenter (source of
vibration) of an Earthquake, versus far away - The farther you are from a light source, the
dimmer the light that reaches you.
5Vibrations and Waves
- Waves that move thru space are called
electromagnetic waves - their energy is carried
thru changing electric and magnetic waves. - Ex Light and heat travel from the sun thru
space
6Vibrations and Waves
- All other waves are mechanical waves, which must
travel thru some form of matter, called a medium,
in order to move their energy from one location
to another. - Ex Earthquakes - energy moves thru the ground
- NOTE The wave moves, but NOT THE MEDIUM!!!!!!!!
- There are three main categories of mechanical
waves, but all three share some important
characteristics.
7Transverse Waves
- Whenever the motion of the medium is at right
angles to the direction the wave travels, the
wave is a transverse wave. - Shaking a rope up and down - rope moves at right
angles to the direction of the wave (along length
of the rope). - Waves caused by the stretched strings of musical
instruments are transverse. - iPhone in a guitar!
- http//m.youtube.com/watch?vINqfM1kdfUc
8Longitudinal Waves
- When the particles of the medium move along the
direction of the wave, and not at right angles to
it, it is a longitudinal wave or compression
wave. - The particles are alternately squeezed together,
compressions and pulled apart, rarefactions These
compressions and rarefactions travel along the
medium.
9- Rubens Tube
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhip-4KF6z4o
- http//youtu.be/hip-4KF6z4o
- http//youtu.be/hip-4KF6z4o
- http//youtu.be/gpCquUWqaYw
- Pyroboard 2d rubens tube
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v2awbKQ2DLRE
10Surface Waves
- A surface wave is a wave that travels along a
surface separating two media. - Ex Ocean wave - Travels along the surface of the
water where it meets the air. - As the wave goes by, anything in its path will
move up and down as it passes, but also forward
and backward, combining to make the object move
in a circle. - The entire column of water is moving
- Matter is not transported in this type of wave in
open water, but as waves approach shore, friction
between the shore and water slows the bottom of
the wave down and the top falls over it, causing
anything that was in the column to move toward
the shoreline, like a toppling building. (ESSAY
QUESTION!!!!!)
11Parts of a Wave
- Crests
- High points in a transverse or surface wave
- Compressions in a longitudinal wave
- Troughs
- Low points in transverse or surface waves
- Rarefactions in longitudinal waves
- The midline is a straight line drawn thru the
crests and troughs that represents the middle of
the wavethis is equilibrium.
www.bbc.co.uk
12Parts of a Wave
- The amplitude of a wave is the distance from the
midline to the crest (or to the trough) of the
wave. Thus, the amplitude is the maximum
displacement from equilibrium. - In a longitudinal wave, it is the distance from
the rest area to the area of greatest compression
or rarefaction.
- The greater the energy of a wave, the greater
its amplitude.
Amplitude.pngwww.gwenio.com
13Parts of a Wave
- Any motion that occurs over and over at regular
intervals is called periodic motion. - The period is the time required for one cycle
from start and back again to complete. - Ex Pendulum swing from the time you let it go
until it comes back to your hand. - Ex From the crest of one wave to the crest of
the next.
Period
science-class.net
14Parts of a Wave
- Frequency is how many waves pass by in a set
period of time, .measured in cycles per second
or hertz (Hz) - Heinrich Hertz demonstrated radio
waves in 1886. - The frequency of a wave is equal to the frequency
of the vibration that causes it. - One vibration per second is 1 Hz 2 is 2 Hz.
- Higher frequencies are measured in kilohertz
(kHz) or megahertz (MHz)AM radio waves are
broadcast in kilohertz and FM are broadcast in
megahertz. - A station transmitting at 101 MHz on the FM dial,
broadcasts radio waves with a frequency of 101
000 000 Hz. This is the frequency at which the
electrons must vibrate in the antenna of the
radio stations transmitting tower. If your car
stereo is set at 101FM, then its antenna is also
vibrating at 101 000 000 Hz and picks up the
signal.
15Parts of a Wave
- If you look at the definitions, period and
frequency are the inverse of one another - The longer the period, the smaller the wave
frequency. - The greater the frequency, the shorter the period
must be. - Frequency 1/period.Period 1/frequency
- If an objects frequency is 2 Hz (2 vibrations
per sec), its period (time needed to complete one
vibration) is 1/2 sec - If an objects frequency is 3 Hz, its period is
1/3 sec
16Parts of a Wave
- The wavelength of a wave is the distance from the
top of one crest to the top of the next (or
between any successive, identical parts of a
wave). - Wavelengths on a beach are measured in meters in
a pond in cm, and of light in micrometers. - Wave speed can be found by
- Wave speed wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
how many in a second - Increasing the frequency of a wave will decrease
its wavelength.
17Wave speed (v) wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed (v) wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
/ how many in a second
- A wave on a rope has a wavelength of 2.0 m and a
frequency of 2.0 Hz. What is the speed of the
wave? - A motorboat is tied to a dock with its motor
running. The spinning propeller makes a surface
wave in the water with a frequency of 4 Hz and a
wavelength of 0.1m. What is the speed of the
wave? - What is the speed of a wave in a spring if it has
a wavelength of 10cm and a period of 0.2s? - What is the wavelength of an earthquake wave if
it has a speed of 5km/s and a frequency of 10 Hz?
18Wave speed (v) wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed (v) wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
/ how many in a second
- A wave on a rope has a wavelength of 2.0 m and a
frequency of 2.0 Hz. What is the speed of the
wave? - v ____
- ? 2.0 m
- f 2.0 Hz
- V 2.0m x 2.0 1/s 4 m/s
19Wave speed (v) wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed (v) wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
/ how many in a second
- A motorboat is tied to a dock with its motor
running. The spinning propeller makes a surface
wave in the water with a frequency of 4 Hz and a
wavelength of 0.1m. What is the speed of the
wave? - v ____
- ? 0.1 m
- f 4 Hz
- V 0.1m x 4 1/s .4m/s
20Wave speed (v) wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed (v) wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
/ how many in a second
- What is the speed of a wave in a spring if it has
a wavelength of 10cm and a period of 0.2s? - v ___
- ? 10cm
- T 0.2 s
- V 10cm / .2s 50 cm/s
21Wave speed (v) wavelength (?) / period (T)
how long the wave is / how long it take
to go by ORWave speed (v) wavelength (?) x
frequency (f) how long the wave is
/ how many in a second
- What is the wavelength of an earthquake wave if
it has a speed of 5km/s and a frequency of 10 Hz? - v 5 km/s
- ? ____
- f 10 Hz
- ? v / f 5 km/s / 10 1/s .5 km
22Vibrations of a Pendulum
- A stone hung from a string is a simple pendulum.
- Pendulums swing to and fro with such regularity
that they have been used to control the motion of
clocks. - The time it takes a pendulum to swing thru its
angle is its period. - A period depends on the length of the pendulum
and the acceleration due to gravity. The mass of
the pendulum does not affect it. - A long pendulum has a longer period than a short
pendulum - it swings to and fro more slowly. - When walking, our legs swing with the help of
gravity, much like a pendulum like a
pendulum, a person with longer legs often has a
slower stride (giraffes horses vs hamsters and
dachshunds)
23Mechanical Waves
- The speed of the wave depends on the medium thru
which it travels. - Sound waves travel at 330m/s to 350 m/s in air
and about 4 times that in water. - Waves travel fastest thru solids, and slowest
thru gases.why? - All things being equal, the distance between
molecules has some effect, but if that was it,
then all solids would transmit waves well and
they do not! - Elasticity! Remember, the molecules need to
vibrate back and forth so if they are unable to
spring back, then they cannot carry the impulse
well. Ex play dough versus steel - Temperature can affect waves - how?
- Warmer temps equal faster moving particles so
they pass on energy more quickly..cooler temps
equal slow moving particles.
24- 32 out of sync metronomes
- https//www.youtube.com/watch?vkqFc4wriBvEfeatur
eyoutube_gdata_player - Or
- http//youtu.be/kqFc4wriBvE
25Wave Interactions
- A reflection occurs when a wave bounce back when
it meets an obstacle (wall), or a boundary
between different media (move from air to water).
- The speed and frequency of the wave does not
change, but it can be flipped upside down. - Yell into a cave and your words will travel until
they hit a wall, and then they bounce back at you
as an echo. - Other than objects like lamps that emit their own
light, everything you see is reflecting light
waves. - Light waves striking the surfaces of animals,
houses, etc, reflect back to you, allowing you to
see them and identify colors. (If its pitch
black, you cant see anything cuz theres no
light to be reflected off of the objects.)
269GAG - Physics is phun.9gag.com
27Wave Interactions
- Refraction is the bending of waves when they pass
from one medium to another, or when the density
of a medium changes. - Occurs when one side of a wave moves more slowly
than the other. - Studying refraction of underground
earthquake waves
have given us
what we know about the
Earths
interior. - Refraction explains why sound waves travel so
much more clearly across a body of water at night
- the cool air above the water refracts the sound
waves in a downward arc toward the other side of
the lake...when the air was warmer during the
day, the same waves would have refracting upward
and away from someone on the other side of the
lake. - Not being able to hear as well across a camp fire
28(No Transcript)
29Wave Interactions
- Diffraction is a bending of a wave as it moves
around an obstacle or through a narrow opening. - The larger the wavelength compared to the
obstacle or opening, the greater the diffraction. - AM radio wavelengths are much larger than FM
- When an AM radio wave reaches an obstacle, it
bends a great deal spreading the signal out
over a large width of area. - FM radio waves can be blocked and lost as you go
down into a low point in a road, or around a
large hill. - The shorter wavelengths give you more definition
and clarity - FM stations are clearer and crisper
- Can see eyelashes on an ultrasound
30- This photo sequence taken in Veszprem, Hungary
As the sun sets toward the horizon, the light has
to travel a longer distance to us and is
scattered more. The shorter wavelengths (blues
and greens) arent as able to get around the
particles in their way and are scattered more,
and the reds and oranges are able to get around
the particles in the way more easily and are the
ones that mostly get to us. - Taken in
Veszprem, Hungary
31(No Transcript)
32Wave Interactions
- An interference pattern occurs when more than one
vibration is acting in a place at one time,
causing 2 or more waves to overlap and combine. - Within a interference pattern, the wave effects
may be increased, decreased or neutralized. - Adding the amplitudes of the waves together,
gives you the resulting wave.
http//youtu.be/PCYv0_qPk-4
http//youtu.be/q74qF6I1uew
33Wave Interactions
- Constructive Interference When the crest of one
wave overlaps the crest of another wave, their
individual effects add together, resulting in a
wave of increased amplitude. - Destructive Interference When the crest of a
wave overlaps the trough of another wave, the
individual effects are reduced - the high part of
one wave fills in the low part of the other. - Can result in neutralization of the wave if the
amplitudes are the same size.
34Interference
When the crest of one wave overlaps the crest of
the other, the wave are in phase with each other
and amplify. When the crest of one wave overlaps
the trough of the other, the waves are out of
phase with each other and diminish or cancel out.
35Wave Interactions
- In a concert hall, you have many sources of sound
being directed out toward the audience. - Once the sound leaves the instruments, it may
travel directly to the listener, but also moves
out across the entire hall and reflects from
surfaces around the room. - If a reflected wave interferes with an original
wave, they can cancel out and cause dead spots
where the volume is greatly reduced. - To avoid this,
- theatres are designed with sound-absorbing tiles
and reflecting panels to control where the sound
goes, ensuring it does not double back on itself
but instead moves toward the audience.
36Wave Interactions
http//youtu.be/q2AynYYMskA
- Noise-cancellation technology uses interference
to cancel out unwanted noise. - Receivers in headsets analyze the amplitude and
frequency of unwanted sounds, and then a tiny
speaker emits a wave at the same frequency but
out of phase so that the two meet and cancel out
in destructive interference. - This type of technology distinguishes between
sounds you do not want and sounds you do so that
you can hear your coworker talking to you over
the sound of the jet engine.
37Standing Waves
- By shaking a rope just right, it is possible to
cause the incident (original) wave and the
reflected wave to form a standing wavein a
standing wave, the nodes are points along the
rope that remain stationary. - The positions on a standing wave with the largest
amplitudes are the antinodes. - Antinodes occur halfway between the nodes
- Standing waves are the result of interference.
- When two waves of equal amplitude and wavelength
pass thru each other in opposite directions, the
waves are always out of phase at the nodes. - Standing waves can be produced in either
longitudinal or transverse waves.
38Standing Waves
Incident Wave
Antinode
Node
Reflected Wave
39Standing Wave Videos Rubens Tube http//www.yo
utube.com/watch?vynqzeIYA7Iw
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vgpCquUWqaYw
Physics Girl Singing Plates https//www.youtube
.com/watch?vwYoxOJDrZzw or http//youtu.be/wYoxOJ
DrZzw
40Sound Waves
- Sound waves are mechanical waves and therefore
follow the same behaviors, with a few additional
terms specific to sound. - Intensity is the rate at which a waves energy
flows through a given area. - Depends on amplitude and the distance from the
source. - Measured in decibels (dB) which is a unit
developed to compare different sounds. - The greater the decibel level, the greater the
intensity and the greater the possible damage
your ear may receive from that sound. (chart on
p. 515) - Loudness is a physical response to intensity.
- Depends on intensity but also the health of your
ears and how your brain interprets information in
the sound waves.
41Wave Characteristics
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vdbeK1fg1Rew
First half on parts of wavelast half on pitch
42Sound Waves
- Remember, frequency depends on the speed of the
vibrating source. - Pitch is the frequency of a sound as you perceive
it. - Affected by the waves frequency but again, also
on age, health, etc. - The higher the frequency of a wave, the higher
its pitch. - Musical Instruments produce standing waves in the
tubing (trumpet, oboe, pipes), along the strings
(piano, violin) or across the vibrating surfaces
(drums) that makes them up Diff in a bass drum
and snare? - the longer the tubing, string or larger surface
area, the longer the wavelength of that standing
wave that can be created the lower the frequency
lower pitch. - Shorter tubing (string, surface area) allows for
only short standing waves higher frequencies
and therefore higher pitch.
43- http//science360.gov/obj/video/7f361151-7757-4083
-86f4-81899df65bfa/innovation-nation-sound-bullets
44Music
- Most musical instruments change the frequency of
standing waves to change their pitch. - Resonance is the response of a standing wave to
another wave of the same frequency. - Can produce a dramatic increase in amplitude.
- Soundboard in a piano is a board that resonates
or vibrates in response to the vibrating strings,
increasing their amplitude. - Acoustic guitars use a soundboard (the wooden
front and back of the guitar) and sound box
(hollow cavity) - vibrations from the strings
resonate the soundboard and resonate the air
inside the sound box, changing amplitude
depending on how those frequencies align.
45- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vuENITui5_jUfeature
youtube_gdata_player
Camera trick Camera is set to 24 Frames per
second
When sound frequency is same, appears still
When sound frequency is at 25Hz, appears to move
slowly forward When sound frequency is at
23Hz, appears to move slowly forward
46Sound Waves
- Most people hear sounds between 20 Hz and 20,000
Hz though age affects this a great deal. - As you age you lose the ends of that spectrum,
so you can hear much higher and lower sounds than
your parents can. - Ultrasound is sound higher than most people hear
and infrasound is sound at lower frequencies. - Sonar (sound navigation and ranging) bounces
sound off of objects in water, and then uses the
speed of sound in water and the time it takes for
the echo to return to determine the distance to
the object and create a 3D map of it. - Ultrasound imaging is used in the same way on
much smaller objects, i.e. human organs, fetus in
the womb, etc.
47Sound Waves
- A change in frequency relative to motion of the
source or receiver or both is called the Doppler
effect. - The greater the speed of the source (or
receiver) the greater the Doppler effect. - The wave crests in front of a moving source of
light or sound are closer together than those
behind it, so the receiver would experience a
higher frequency if he is in front of the source. - Changing pitch of a car horn as it passes by - as
it approaches, its pitch is higher because its
sound wave crests are reaching you more
frequently as it passes and moves away, the
pitch drops cuz the waves encounter you less
frequently. - http//videos.howstuffworks.com/discovery/27963-as
signment-discovery-doppler-effect-video.htm
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLIvVzJ6KZpk
48The Doppler Effect
- Light waves also experience the Doppler
effect.as a light source approaches, there is an
increase in frequency and as it recedes, there is
a decrease in frequency - An increase in light frequency is called a blue
shift, as the increase is toward the
high-frequency, or blue, end of the color
spectrum. - A decrease in frequency is called a red shift,
referring to the low-frequency, or red, end of
the color spectrum. - When scientists look at the universe they see a
trend toward a red shift, which indicates that
the expansion of the universe is slowing,
supporting the Big Bang theory.
49Sound Waves
- When the speed of the source is the same as the
speed of the waves it produces, a wave barrier
is produced. - When a wave barrier is produced, the crests keep
piling up in front of the source in order for
the source to pass this barrier and go faster, it
must exert a great deal of energy. - When aircraft fly at the speed of sound, a
barrier of compressed air is produced in front of
the plane. Additional thrust is required to
burst through. - The sudden increase in pressure can cause the
water vapor in the air to condense into visible
water droplets or clouds.
The PrandtlGlauert Singularity Amazing Jet
Plane Shock Collar ...www.kuriositas.com
Ares I-X Launch Image Gallerywww.universetoday.com
50Shock Waves
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vgWGLAAYdbbcfeatur
eyoutube_gdata_player
- A boat speeding thru water faster than the waves
it is producing, creates a 2 dimensional shock
wave. An aircraft flying faster than the speed
of sound (supersonic) produces a 3 dimensional
shock wave. - A shock wave is produced by overlapping spheres
that build up. The conical shock wave spreads
until it reaches the ground. - A sonic boom is the sharp crack of noise heard
when the conical shock wave reaches the listeners
on the ground.
51Sound Waves
Which travels faster, sound or light?
This is footage of the meteor that landed in
Russia, early in the morning on February 15,
2013. The damage to the buildings was caused by
SOUND WAVES!
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vpFBtfR54Svk
https//www.youtube.com/watch?v1kvHl5Qcnzc
https//www.youtube.com/watch?vwZ2XXa5oFhw
Volcano Eruption in Papua New Guinea sound
waves, clouds. http//www.youtube.com/watch?vBU
REX8aFbMs
52Shock Waves
- Only when the craft moves faster than sound do
the crests overlap, and are encountered by the
listener as a single burst - the sonic boom. - This sudden increase in pressure is the same as
produced by an explosion - the ear cannot
distinguish between the high pressure from an
explosion and that from a sonic boom. - A sonic boom is not produced at the moment the
aircraft passes thru the sound barrier - it is
heard when the waves reach the listener.
53Hearing and Your Ear
- There are three major areas of the ear outer
ear, middle ear and inner ear - The outer ear gathers and focuses sound into the
middle ear. - Middle ear receives and amplifies the vibrations
- The inner ear organ called the cochlea is filled
with fluid and nerve endings with tiny hair-like
projections that sway as the vibrations move thru
the fluid and send the signals to the brain for
translation.
54biology-pictures.blogspot.com