Waves - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Waves

Description:

Waves Unit 4: Pages 334 to 421 Chapter 8 in text – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:70
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: EvoButler
Category:
Tags: pond | solar | waves

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Waves


1
Waves
  • Unit 4 Pages 334 to 421
  • Chapter 8 in text

2
What do you already know?
  • What is a wave? (where can you find this
    info???
  • Where do we see waves in our everyday lives?
  • Do we see all waves?
  • Why are waves important to physicists?

3
With the person next to you
  • Create a list of as many waves you can think of
    in your everyday lives
  • 1 minute! Go!

4
Waves - Everyday
  • Earthquakes
  • Tsunamis
  • Sound waves
  • Radio waves
  • Light waves
  • Regular ocean waves
  • Springs (Slinky!)
  • car suspension

5
NOTE
  • Light may or may not behave as a wave. There are
    two theories but light as a wave is the main
    theory some physicists believe light behaves as
    a wave of electromagnetic radiation
  • Other theory Some physicists believe light is
    made of massless particles called photons not
    waves.
  • Most physicists believe that light behaves as
    both physics 12!!!

6
What is a wave (in physics)?
  • Wave a disturbance that transfers energy
  • Whether ocean waves, waves on a string,
    earthquake waves, or sound waves in air, they all
    have a vibration as their source.
  • Waves move large distances across the surface of
    a lake or the sea, yet the water itself does not
    travel those distances. Only the ENERGY!

7
Why are waves important to physicists?
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vTGaM8pdnr50feature
    related
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?featureSeriesPlayLis
    tvXoYBAsHHXsklistPLFF513AD10F64B864
  • http//www.bing.com/videos/search?qsinusoidalwav
    e2cclassroomdemowithmusicFORMHDRSC3viewde
    tailmidCE19F9685E15A9EC09A9CE19F9685E15A9EC09A9
  • Waves are very important in engineering
    (buildings, bridges), seismology, etc. Waves
    explain how ENERGY MOVES.

8
Other Words for Wave
  • Vibration
  • Wiggle
  • Oscillate

9
What do you need to cause a vibration?
  • FORCE!

10
Summary Slide
  • Wave a disturbance that transfers energy
  • Waves explain how ENERGY MOVES.
  • Only the energy of a wave moves not the
    material itself
  • Waves are used in seismology, engineering, sound
    technology, light technology, radiation, solar
    energy, etc.

11
Summary Slide
  • A wave needs a force to start and end.
  • Waves are also called vibrations and oscillations.

12
You were asked for homework to define the
following
  • Mechanical waves
  • Electromagnetic waves
  • Transverse waves
  • Longitudinal waves
  • Surface waves
  • Give an example of each type of wave.

13
Mechanical Waves
  • A mechanical wave is a wave that requires a
    medium in order to transport energy from one
    location to another.
  • Example Sound waves

14
Question
  • If waves need a medium, how does sound energy get
    transferred through the air?

15
Electromagnetic Waves
  • An electromagnetic wave is a wave that is capable
    of transmitting its energy through a vacuum
    (i.e., empty space).
  • Electromagnetic waves are produced by the
    vibration of charged particles.
  • Example Light waves
  • Light travels through space (no medium) from the
    sun to Earth

16
Types of Waves
  • There are three types of mechanical waves.
  • 1. Transverse
  • 2. Longitudinal
  • 3. Surface

17
Transverse Waves
Transverse waves are when the displacement is
perpendicular to the direction of the wave
Transverse waves are the ones most people can
draw. Example. S waves (earthquakes),
radiowaves, x-rays, and light waves (all
electromagnetic waves)
18
  • All electromagnetic waves are transverse waves.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vUHcse1jJAto

19
Longitudinal Waves
Longitudinal waves are when the displacement is
parallel to the direction of the wave
Longitudinal waves travel through liquid
(tsunamis) Example P waves (geology), Sound
waves, ultrasound waves
20
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vRbuhdo0AZDU
  • http//www.gcse.com/waves/waves2.htm

21
Surface Waves
  • A surface wave is a wave in which particles of
    the medium undergo a circular motion. They are
    typically in fluids (water or gas).
  • Example Water ripples on the surface of the pond

22
Questions for you!
  • 1. A transverse wave is transporting energy from
    east to west. The particles of the medium will
    move_____.
  • east to west only
  • both eastward and westward
  • c. north to south only
  • d. both northward and southward

23
  • Answer D
  • The particles would be moving back and forth in a
    direction perpendicular to energy transport. The
    waves are moving westward, so the particles move
    northward and southward.

24
  • 2. A wave is transporting energy from left to
    right. The particles of the medium are moving
    back and forth in a leftward and rightward
    direction. This type of wave is known as a ____.
  • A. Longitudinal
  • B. Transverse

25
  • LONGITUDINAL!

26
In groups
  • 1) Create a transverse wave with a slinky.
  • 2) Create a longitudinal wave with a slinky.
  • 3) Create an organizational chart/diagram/Venn
    diagram to show the types of waves and an example
    of each.

27
  • Make a longitudinal wave with a slinky
  • You produce a different wave when you move your
    hand backwards and forwards along the slinky.
    This sort of wave is a longitudinal wave. The
    particles carrying the wave in the slinky move
    backwards and forwards along the direction of
    wave motion.

28
  • Make a Transverse Wave using the slinky
  • When using a slinky, move your hand from side to
    side some humps move away from you along the
    slinky. Although the waves move along the
    slinky, the movement of the slinky is side to
    side. This is a transverse wave. The particles
    carrying the wave in the slinky move at right
    angles to the direction of wave motion.

29
Bobbleheads
  • In groups
  • http//www.physicsclassroom.com/class/waves/u10l0a
    .cfm
  • How does a bobblehead act like a wave or a
    vibration?
  • How does the vibration start?
  • Why does the vibration end?

30
Tuning Fork
  • How does a tuning fork act like a wave or a
    vibration?
  • How does the vibration start?
  • Why does the vibration end?

31
Question
  • Minute after minute, hour after hour, day after
    day, ocean waves continue to splash onto the
    shore. Explain why the beach is not completely
    submerged and why the middle of the ocean has not
    yet been depleted of its water supply.

32
Answer
  • Ocean waves do not transport water. An ocean wave
    could not bring a single drop of water from the
    middle of the ocean to shore. Ocean waves can
    only bring energy to the shore the particles of
    the medium (water) simply oscillate about their
    fixed position. As such, water does not pile up
    on the beach.

33
  • TRUE or FALSE
  • In order for John to hear Jill, air molecules
    must move from the lips of Jill to the ears of
    John.

34
FALSE!
  • A sound wave involves the movement of energy from
    one location to another, not the movement of
    material. The air molecules are the particles of
    the medium, and they are only temporarily
    displaced, always returning to their original
    position.

35
  • 3. Describe how the fans in a stadium must move
    in order to produce a longitudinal stadium wave.
    How would they make a transverse wave?

36
  • The fans will need to sway side to side. Thus, as
    the wave travels around the stadium they would be
    moving parallel to its direction of motion. If
    they rise up and sit down, then they would be
    creating a transverse wave.

37
  • 4. A science fiction film depicts inhabitants of
    one spaceship (in outer space) hearing the sound
    of a nearby spaceship as it zooms past at high
    speeds. Critique the physics of this film.

38
  • This is an example of faulty physics in film.
    Sound is a mechanical wave and could never be
    transmitted through the vacuum of outer space (no
    medium!)

39
Quick Review
  • 1) What 2 things do ALL waves need?
  • 2) What do mechanical waves need that
    electromagnetic waves dont need?
  • 3) What are the three sub-types of mechanical
    waves? Give an example of each.
  • 4) Which of these sub-types is always an
    electromagnetic wave? Give an example of an
    electromagnetic wave.

40
Answers
  • 1) Pulse/disturbance/force to start the wave and
    Energy
  • 2) Mechanical waves need a medium to carry the
    energy from one point to another
  • 3) Transverse (light), Longitudinal (sound),
    Surface (pebble dropped in a pond)
  • 4) Transverse (light, xrays)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com