Title: Chapter 6 Waves and Sound (Section 2)
1Chapter 6Waves and Sound(Section 2)
26.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- In this section, we consider what waves do as
they travel. - For waves traveling along a surface or throughout
space in three dimensions, it is convenient to
use two different ways to represent the wave. - We will call these the wave-front model and the
ray model.
36.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- The figure shows how each is used to illustrate a
wave pulse on water as it travels from the point
where it was produced. - The wave front is a circle that shows the
location of the peak of the wave pulse.
46.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- A ray is a straight arrow that shows the
direction a given segment of the wave is
traveling.
56.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- A laser beam and sunlight passing through a small
hole in a window shade both approximate
individual rays of light that we can see if there
is dust in the air.
66.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- On the other hand, the rays of water ripples are
not visible, but we do see the wave fronts.
76.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- For a continuous water wave, the wave fronts are
concentric circles around the point of origin
(the source of the wave) that represent
individual peaks of the wave.
86.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- The largest circle shows the position of the
first peak that was produced. - Each successive wave front is smaller because it
came later and has not traveled as far. - The distance between adjacent wave fronts is
equal to the wavelength of the wave.
96.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- Again, a continuous wave is like a series of wave
pulses produced one after another. - The rays used to represent a continuous wave are
lines radiating from the source of the wave (the
blue arrows in the figure).
106.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- The wave fronts arriving at a point far from the
source are nearly straight lines (far right in
the figure). - The corresponding rays are nearly parallel.
116.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- For a wave moving in three-dimensional space,
like the sound traveling outward from you in all
directions as you shout or whistle, the wave
fronts are spherical shells surrounding the
source of the wave. - The wave front of a wave pulse, such as the sound
from a hand clap, expands like a balloon that is
being inflated very rapidly.
126.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- For continuous three-dimensional waves such as a
steady whistle, the wave fronts form a series of
concentric spherical shells that expand like the
circular wave fronts of a wave on a surface. - A 440-hertz tuning fork produces 440 of these
wave fronts each second. - The surface of each wave front expands outward
with a speed of 344 m/s (at room temperature). - As with waves on a surface, the rays used to
represent a continuous wave in three dimensions
are lines radiating outward from the wave source.
136.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- One inherent aspect of the propagation of waves
on a surface or in three dimensions is that the
amplitude of the wave necessarily decreases as
the wave gets farther from the source. - A certain amount of energy is expended to create
a wave pulse or each cycle of a continuous wave.
146.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- This energy is distributed over the wave front
and determines the amplitude of the wave - The greater the amount of energy given to a wave
front, the larger the amplitude. - As the wave front moves out, it gets larger, so
this energy is spread out more and becomes less
concentrated. - This attenuation accounts for the decrease in
loudness of sound as a noisy car moves away from
you and for the decrease in brightness of a
lightbulb as you move away from it.
156.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- One can infer when the amplitude of a wave is
changing by noting changes in the wave front or
the rays. If the wave fronts are growing larger,
then the amplitude is getting smaller. - The same thing is indicated when the rays are
diverging (slanting away from each other).
166.2 Aspects of Wave Propagation
- At great distances from the source of a
three-dimensional wave, the wave fronts become
nearly flat and are called plane waves. - The corresponding rays are parallel, and the
waves amplitude stays constant. - The light and other radiation we receive from the
Sun come as plane waves because of the great
distance between Earth and the Sun. - With this background, we will look at several
phenomena associated with wave propagation.
176.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- A wave is reflected whenever it reaches a
boundary of its medium or encounters an abrupt
change in the properties (density, temperature,
and so on) of its medium. - A wave pulse traveling on a rope is reflected
when it reaches a fixed end.
186.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- It bounces off the end and travels back along
the rope. - Notice that the reflected pulse is inverted.
- When the end of the rope is attached to a very
light (but strong) string instead, the reflected
pulse is not inverted.
196.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- The incoming pulse causes two pulses to leave the
junction, a reflected pulse and a pulse that
continues into the light string. - This reflection occurs because of an abrupt
change in the density of the medium from high
density (for the heavy rope) to low density (for
the light string).
206.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- Similarly, a wave on a surface or a wave in three
dimensions is reflected when it encounters a
boundary. - The wave that bounces back is called the
reflected wave. - Rays are more commonly used to illustrate
reflection because they nicely show how the
direction of each part of the wave is changed.
216.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- When a wave is reflected from a straight boundary
(for surface waves) or a flat boundary (in three
dimensions), the reflected wave appears to be
expanding out from a point behind the boundary.
226.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- This point is called the image of the original
wave source. - An echo is a good example sound that encounters
a large flat surface, such as the face of a
cliff, is reflected and sounds like it is coming
from a point behind the cliff.
236.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- Our most common experience with reflection is
that of light from a mirror. - The image that you see in a mirror is a
collection of reflected light rays originating
from the different points on the object you see.
246.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- Reflection from surfaces that are not flat (or
straight) can cause interesting things to happen
to waves. - The figure shows a wave being reflected by a
curved surface. - Note that the rays representing the reflected
part of the wave are converging toward each
other.
256.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- This means that the amplitude of the wave is
increasingthe wave is being focused. - Parabolic microphones seen on the sidelines of
televised football games use this principle to
reinforce the sounds made on the playing field. - Satellite receiving dishes do the same with radio
waves.
266.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- A reflector in the shape of an ellipse has a
useful property. - Recall that the orbits of satellites, comets, and
planets can be ellipses. - An ellipse has two points in its interior called
foci (the plural of focus). - If a wave is produced at one focus, it will
converge on the other focus after reflecting off
the elliptical surface. - All rays originating from one focus reflect off
the ellipse and pass through the other focus.
276.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationReflection
- A room shaped like an ellipse is called a
whispering chamber because a person standing at
one focus can hear faint soundseven
whisperingproduced at the other focus. - This property of the ellipse is also used in the
medical treatment of kidney stones.
286.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- Can you recall the last time a fast-moving
emergency vehicle with its siren blaring passed
near you? - If so, you may remember that the pitch or tone of
its sound dropped suddenly as it went by - Although, you may be so used to this phenomenon
that you didnt notice it.
296.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- This is a manifestation of the Doppler effect
- The apparent change in the frequency of wave
fronts emitted by a moving source, perhaps a
tugboat floating down a river or a train
traveling along a track, each blowing its horn. - Each wave front expands outward from the point
where the source was when it emitted that wave
front.
306.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- In contrast to what is shown in the figure, where
the source is stationary, ahead of the moving
source, the wave fronts are bunched together.
316.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- This means that the wavelength is shorter than
when the source is at rest, and therefore the
frequency of the wave is higher. - Behind the moving source, the wave fronts are
spread apart - The wavelength is longer, and the frequency is
lower than when the source is motionless.
326.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- In both places, the higher the speed of the wave
source, the greater the change in frequency. - Note The speed of a wave in a medium is constant
and is not affected by any motion associated with
the wave source. - Thus, if the wavelength goes up, the frequency
must go down, and vice versa, to yield a constant
wave speed v lf
336.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- The frequency of sound that reaches a person in
front of a moving train is higher than that
perceived when the train is not moving. - A person behind the moving train hears a lower
frequency. - As a train or a fast car moves by, you hear the
sound shift from a higher frequency (pitch) to a
lower frequency. - The change in the loudness of the sound, which
you also hear, is not part of the Doppler effect
- it involves a separate process
346.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- A similar shift in frequency of sound occurs if
you are moving toward a stationary sound source.
356.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- This Doppler shift happens because the speed of
the wave relative to you is higher than that when
you are not moving. - The wave fronts approach you with a speed equal
to the wave speed plus your speed. - Because the wavelength is not affected, the
equation v fl tells us that the frequency of
the wave is increased in proportion to the speed
of the wave relative to you. - By the same reasoning, when one is moving away
from the sound source, the frequency is reduced.
366.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- The Doppler effect occurs for both sound and
light and is routinely taken into account by
astronomers. - The frequencies of light emitted by stars that
are moving toward or away from Earth are shifted.
- If the speed of the star is known, the original
frequencies of the light can be computed. - If the frequencies are known instead, the speed
of the star can be computed from the amount of
the Doppler shift. - Such information is essential for determining the
motions of stars in our galaxy or of entire
galaxies throughout the universe.
376.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- Echolocation is the process of using the waves
reflected from an object to determine its
location. Radar and sonar are two examples. - Basic echolocation uses reflection only
- A wave is emitted from a point, reflected by an
object of some kind, and detected on its return
to the original point. - The time between the emission of the wave and the
detection of the reflected wave (the round-trip
time) depends on the speed of the wave and the
distance to the reflecting object.
386.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- For example, if you shout at a cliff and hear the
echo 1 second later, you know that the cliff is
approximately 172 meters away. - This is because the sound travels a total of 344
meters (172 meters each way) in 1 second (at room
temperature). - If it takes 2 seconds, the cliff is approximately
344 meters away, and so on.
396.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- With sonar, a sound pulse is emitted from an
underwater speaker, and any reflected sound is
detected by an underwater microphone. - The time between the transmission of the pulse
and the reception of the reflected pulse is used
to determine the distance to the reflecting
object. - Basic radar uses a similar process with
microwaves that reflect off aircraft, raindrops,
and other things.
406.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- Incorporating the Doppler effect in echolocation
makes it possible to immediately determine the
speed of an approaching or departing object. - A moving object causes the reflected wave to be
Doppler shifted. - If the frequency of the reflected wave is higher
than that of the original wave, the object is
moving toward the source. - If the frequency is lower, then the object is
moving away.
416.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- Doppler radar uses this combination of
echolocation and the Doppler effect. - The time between transmission and reception gives
the distance to the object, whereas the amount of
frequency shift is used to determine the speed. - Law-enforcement officers use Doppler radar to
check the speeds of vehicles, and Doppler radar
is also used in base-ball, tennis, and other
sports to clock the speed of a ball.
426.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDoppler Effect
- Dust, raindrops, and other particles in air
reflect microwaves, making it possible to detect
the rapidly swirling air in a tornado with
Doppler radar. - Another potentially life-saving application is
the detection of wind sheardrastic changes in
wind speed near storms that have caused
low-flying aircraft to crash.
436.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- In the previous discussion, we have implicitly
assumed that the speed of the wave source is much
less than the wave speed itself. - However, if youve ever heard a sonic boom or
been jostled by the wake of a passing watercraft
while floating in the water, youve had
experience with circumstances where the reverse
is true.
446.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- The figure shows another series of wave fronts
produced by a moving wave source. - This time the speed of the wave source is greater
than the wave speed. - The wave fronts pile up in the forward
direction and form a large-amplitude wave pulse
called a shock wave. - This is what causes the V-shaped bow waves
produced by swimming duck and moving boats.
456.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- Aircraft flying faster than the speed of sound
produce a similar shock wave. - In this case, the three-dimensional wave fronts
form a conical shock wave, with the aircraft at
the cones apex. - This conical wave front moves with the aircraft
and is heard as a sonic boom (a sound pulse) by
persons on the ground.
466.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationDiffraction
- Think about walking down a street and passing by
an open door or window with sound coming from
inside. - You can hear the sound even before you get to the
opening, as well as after youve passed it. - The sound doesnt just go straight out of the
opening like a beam, it spreads out to the sides.
- This is diffraction.
476.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- The figure shows wave fronts as they reach a gap
in a barrier. - These might be sound waves passing through a door
or ocean waves encountering a breakwater. - The part of the wave that passes through the gap
actually sends out wave fronts to the sides as
well as ahead. - The rays that represent this process show that
the wave bends around the edges of the
opening.
486.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- The extent to which the diffracted wave spreads
out depends on the ratio of the size of the
opening to the wavelength of the wave. - When the opening is much larger than the
wavelength, there is little diffraction - The wave fronts remain straight and do not spread
out to the sides appreciably. - This is what happens when light comes in through
a window. - The wavelength of light is less than a millionth
of a meter, and consequently, there is little
diffraction.
496.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- When the wavelength is roughly the same size as
the opening, the diffracted wave spreads out much
more.
506.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationBow Waves and
Shock Waves
- The sizes of windows and doors are well within
the range of the wavelengths of sound waves, so
sound diffracts a great deal after passing
through them. - Higher frequencies (shorter wavelengths) are not
diffracted as much as the lower frequencies.
516.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Interference arises when two continuous waves,
usually with the same amplitude and frequency,
arrive at the same place. - The sound from a stereo with the same steady tone
coming from each speaker is an example of this
situation. - Another way to cause interference is to direct a
continuous wave at a barrier with two openings in
it. - The two waves that emerge from the two openings
will diffract (spread out), overlap each other,
and undergo interference.
526.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Consider the case of identical, continuous water
waves produced by two small objects made to
oscillate up and down in unison on the surface of
the water. - As these two waves travel outward, each point in
the surrounding water moves up and down under the
influence of both waves. - If we move around in an arc about the wave
sources, we find that at some places the water is
moving up and down with a large amplitude. - At other places, the water is actually stillit
is not oscillating at all.
536.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
546.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- To see why this characteristic pattern of
large-amplitude and zero-amplitude motion arises,
consider the figure below, a sketch showing two
waves at one moment in time. - The thicker lines represent peaks of the waves,
and the thinner lines represent the valleys.
556.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- In the figure shown, the straight lines labeled C
indicate the places where the two waves are in
phasethe peak of one wave matches the peak of
the other, and valley matches valley. - The two waves reinforce each other, and the
amplitude is large. - This is called constructive interference.
566.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- On the straight lines labeled D, the waves are
out of phasethe peak of one wave matches the
valley of the other. - The two waves cancel each other.
- Whenever one wave has upward displacement, the
other has downward displacement, and vice versa.
Therefore, the net displacement is always zero. - This is called destructive interference.
576.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- This figure shows the same waves a short time
later after the waves have traveled one-half of a
wavelength. - The pattern of constructive and destructive
interference is not altered as the waves travel
outward.
586.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- If the photograph shown had been taken earlier or
later, it would look the same.
596.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Whether the two waves are in phase or out of
phase depends on the relative distances they
travel. - To reach any point on line C1 in the figure, the
two waves travel the same distance and
consequently arrive with peak matching peak and
valley matching valley.
606.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Along the line C2, the wave from the source on
the left must travel a distance equal to one
wavelength farther than the wave from the source
on the right. - The reverse is true along the line on the left
labeled C. - In general, there is constructive interference at
all points where one wave travels one, or two, or
three . . . wavelengths farther than the other
wave.
616.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- On the other hand, along the line of destructive
interference labeled D1, the wave from the source
on the left has to travel one-half wavelength
farther than the wave from the source on the
right. - They arrive with peak matching valley and cancel
each other.
626.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Along the far-right line labeled D, the wave from
the source on the left has to travel wavelengths
farther, so the two waves again arrive out of
phase. - The reverse is true for the lines showing
destructive interference on the left.
636.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- In general, there is destructive interference at
all points where one wave travels ½ , or 1 ½ , or
2 ½ , . . . wavelengths farther than the other
wave. - At places in between constructive and destructive
interference, the waves are not completely in
phase or out of phase, so they partially
reinforce or cancel each other.
646.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Sound and other longitudinal waves can undergo
interference in the same way. - We can imagine the figure representing sound
waves with the peaks corresponding to
compressions and the valleys corresponding to
expansions.
656.2 Aspects of Wave PropagationInterference
- Along the lines of constructive interference, one
would hear a loud, steady sound. - Along the lines of destructive interference, one
would hear no sound at all.