ThisThis is a demonstration of what wave phenomenon…

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 15 WAVES.
Advertisements

Unit 7 Waves Chapter 11 Pages
Chapter 1.
Waves and Sound Review Wave Words All About Waves Do the WAVE! Silly Sounds Wave Math
WAVES AND VIBRATIONS NOTES
Ch. 10,11, 13 Waves. Name some waves Water Sound Light Radio waves (TV) Microwaves (cell phones) X-rays Ultrasound Earthquakes! (seismic waves)
Mechanical Waves.
WAVES Definition: A traveling disturbance that carries energy through matter and space Waves transfer energy without transferring matter. Waves are produced.
7 th Grade – Chapter #8. What are waves? Wave- a disturbance that transfers energy from place to place. Energy- is defined as the ability to do work.
Bell Work: Test Review 1. What is the range of human hearing?
SOUND A vibrating object, such as your voice box, stereo speakers, guitar strings, etc., creates longitudinal waves in the medium around it. When these.
Lots of fun! Win valuable prizes!. 1. The source of all wave motion is a A. region of variable high and low pressure. B. movement of matter. C. harmonic.
Waves & Sound.
Compressional Waves.  Requires a medium for propagation.  Compression of molecules transmit sound.
Vibrations, Waves, & Sound
Ch. 20 Wave Notes Cool Wave Effect Cool Wave Effect.
WAVES Vibrations (disturbances) that carry energy from one place to another Presentation 2003 Philip M. Dauber as Modified by R. McDermott.
 A vibration that repeats regularly in space and time  Transmitted from one place to another w/out actually transporting matter  A transmission of.
Chapter 15.2 – Characteristics of Waves amplitude – the maximum distance that the particles of a wave’s medium vibrate from their rest position -in a transverse.
The Energy of Waves!!!! Students will describe how waves transfer energy, types of waves, properties of waves, and different wave interactions.
Sound. Sound Waves travel as compressions & expansions Alternating regions of compressed and expanded air These regions move away from source as longitudinal.
Waves A repeating movement or disturbance that transfers energy...
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Audio File I heard thatAmped up A.
Characteristics of Waves
WAVE Basics Chapters 15.
WAVES. The Nature of Waves A. Wave - a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space. 1. Molecules pass energy on to.
Sound Physics. Sound Source All sounds are produced by the vibrations of material objects The frequency of sounds is often described by the word pitch.
What is a wave?  A wave is a transfer of energy from one point to another via a traveling disturbance  A wave is characterized by its wavelength, frequency,
Waves Chapter 10. The Nature of Waves wave: repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space -examples: light, ocean, sound,
The Nature of Waves What is a wave? A wave is a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space Waves transfer energy.
Sound Bites. Basics Sound is a mechanical, longitudinal wave. The medium usually associated with sound is air, but sound can travel through both liquids.
Chapter 19 Vibrations and Waves There are two ways to transmit information/energy in our universe: Particle Motion and Wave Motion.
Waves Chapter 14.
Chapter 10 Section 1 The Nature of Waves
Chapter 9: Introduction to Waves
Chapter 25 Vibrations and Waves. Vibration – a wiggle in time For example: moving back and forth in the same space, ie., pendulum. **A vibration exists.
1 Waves Chapter Wave at the Shoe 3 Types of Waves A wave is a disturbance that carries energy through matter or space. The medium is the matter.
WAVES Essential Questions:  What is a wave?  How do waves travel?  What are the types of waves?  What are the properties of waves?  What are 4 types.
Chapter Review Game. Amplitude: tells us how much energy a wave has.
Ch Waves & Sound I. Characteristics of Waves Waves
T Waves and Sound Jeopardy T Today’s topics are….
Waves, Light, & Sound Chapter 6. Student Learning Objectives Analyze wave motion Recall attributes of electromagnetic waves & sound waves Explain resonance.
Waves What do you know?. Types of waves Mechanical – need a medium or material to travel through ex. Water, slinky Mechanical – need a medium or material.
& Simple Harmonic Motion Any periodically repeating event. (Ex: waves, pendulums, heartbeats, etc.)
Waves What are waves?????.
Bell Ringer What causes sound?. Bell Ringer Explain one station from yesterday. How did length affect pitch? How did sound travel through different materials?
1 Waves and Vibrations. 2 Waves are everywhere in nature Sound waves, visible light waves, radio waves, microwaves, water waves, earthquake waves, slinky.
Waves. 7A examine and describe oscillatory motion and wave propagation in various types of media 7B investigate and analyze characteristics of waves,
Sound and Light. What is a wave? Disturbance that travels through a medium (substance) When a wave isn’t traveling, it is considered to be in equilibrium.
Wave Definition: A disturbance that transfers energy from place to place. A medium, a medium is the material through which a wave travels. A medium can.
Chapter 26: Sound. What causes sound? The vibration of matter.
Waves and Sound Review Wave Words Do the WAVE! Wave Math
WAVES Essential Questions:
Sound and Music.
Properties of Waves Waves have energy and transfer energy when they interact with matter They cannot travel through empty space!
oscillations waves Doppler, Shock wave And S.R. lab Sound and Music
CHAPTER 25 Vibration & Waves.
WAVES.
a. A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy from place to place.
Chapter 17: Mechanical Waves & Sound
WAVES AND VIBRATIONS NOTES
A wave created by shaking a rope up and down is called a
Section 2 – Properties of Waves pp
Section 2 – Properties of Waves pp
Section 2 – Properties of Waves pp
(WAVE TEST REVIEW WORKSHEET)
Waves & Sound Unit 6.
Section 2 – Properties of Waves pp
The Nature of Waves. The Nature of Waves What is a wave?
Waves carry energy from one place to another
Presentation transcript:

ThisThis is a demonstration of what wave phenomenon…

Resonance

Can sound waves travel in a vacuum?

NO, they need a medium to travel through.

The distance between one waves crest and the next waves crest is called a ___________.

wavelength

For each second you count between lightning and the thunder it produces, how far away does it mean the lightning is from you?

340 meters  About 1/5 th of a mile  Or about 1/3 rd of a kilometer

Noise cancelling headphones are an example of ________ interference.

Destructive

What causes a tsunami?

An underwater earthquake  OR a massive landslide

If an ambulance is headed toward you the frequency of the sound waves coming toward you is ________ than normal.

Higher frequency  Shorter wavelength

The frequency of the sound coming from that same ambulance would be ________ than normal as it moves a way from you

Lower frequency  Higher wavelength

A wave travels a distance of 20 meters in a time of 4 seconds, what is the speed of the wave?

5 m/s

Which of these would sound travel the fastest through  Salt water  Fresh water  A wood cabinet  A steel beam

Steel beam, because it is the most rigid

Is there sound in outer space?

NO, space is a vacuum and sound needs a medium to travel through

On a standing wave, the points that do not move are referred to as…..

Nodes

The number of times a wave vibrates each second is referred to as _______

frequency

The amount of time it takes each wave to pass is referred to as _______

Period

What type of wave is a sound wave?

Longitudinal wave

Waves in the ocean are what type of wave

Transverse

What is the proper unit for frequency?

Hertz

An oceanic depth-sounding vessel surveys the ocean bottom with ultrasonic sound that travels 1530 m/s in seawater, and finds a 10-second time delay of the echo to the ocean floor and back. The ocean depth there is

7650 meters

Beats are produced by two tuning forks that are sounded together, if one tuning fork has a frequency of 300 Hz and the other has a frequency of 305 Hz, what will be the frequency of the beats they produce?

5 Hz  Difference between frequencies

What destroyed the Tacoma Narrows bridge?

Resonance/ Standing Wave  A standing wave was created when the bridge resonated at its natural frequency as caused by the wind.

A 680 Hz sound wave that travels through air at a speed of 340 m/s would have a wavelength of____?

.5 meters  V = fλ  So λ = v/ f or 340 / 680

12 full waves pass a dock in a time of 6 seconds.  A) what is the frequency of the waves?  B) What is the period of the waves

 A) 2 Hz  B).5 seconds

A skipper on a boat notices wave crests passing the anchor chain every 6 seconds. The skipper estimates the distance between crests at 30 m. What is the speed of the water waves?

In what kind of situation(s) would the doppler effect occur?

If a source of sound waves is moving toward you or away from you

If the frequency of a set of waves is increased, what will happen to wavelength?

It will go down  Inverse relationship

What of these wave properties determines the pitch of a sound wave?  Frequency  Wavelength  Period  Speed

Frequency  High frequency  high pitch

What is the source of all wave motion?

Vibration

A wave created by shaking a rope up and down is called a ______ wave.

Transverse

A wave has a wavelength of 1.5 meters. During a single period this wave has travelled how far?

1.5 meters

The amplitude of a wave is 3.0 meters, the top to bottom distance of the disturbance would be

6 meters

What property of a wave determines loudness?

Amplitude

Two waves that are in-phase with each other will undergo _______ interference.

Constructive  New larger wave will be produced  Amplitudes add together

The phenomenon of ‘beats’ results from which of these  Interference  Diffraction  Frequency modulation  resonance

interference

T or F. We would hear a sonic boom the instant a supersonic plane flew overhead.

False, it would be after the plane was directly overhead because the planes sound is trailing it

T or F. Resonance occurs when an object vibrates at its natural frequency

True  Every elastic object has its own natural frequency, when it vibrates at that frequency a large increase in amplitude will happen

A certain ocean wave has a frequency of 10 hertz and a wavelength of 3 meters. What is the wave’s speed?

30 m/s

The period of a wave is 8 seconds, what is its frequency?

1/8 Hz

How do we use the Doppler Effect to tell us that the universe is still expanding?

 All galaxies are ‘red-shifted’ meaning they have longer wavelengths of light, this tells us they are all moving away from us…. Universe is expanding

If you have created a standing wave with a slinky and increase the frequency with which you are shaking the slinky what will happen to the number of waves in the slinky?

Number of waves will increase  Wavelength of each wave will decrease  more waves crammed into the same length

The regions in between the compressed regions of a sound wave are called _________.

Rarefactions

The amplitude of a water wave is.5 meters. If a raft has one full wave pass under it… through how much distance will it vibrate?

2 meters  4 amplitudes

How is a sonic boom formed?

 Something moving faster than the speed of sound

What other than a jet-powered vehicle can create a sonic boom?

Crack of a whip

What does ‘ultrasonic’ mean?

 Sound waves that have a frequency higher than that which is audible >20,000 Hz.