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15.2 Sound Waves
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Chapter 15 Objectives Explain how the pitch, loudness, and speed of sound are related to properties of waves. Describe how sound is created and recorded. Give examples of refraction, diffraction, absorption, and reflection of sound waves. Explain the Doppler effect. Give a practical example of resonance with sound waves. Explain the relationship between the superposition principle and Fourier’s theorem. Describe how the meaning of sound is related to frequency and time. Describe the musical scale, consonance, dissonance, and beats in terms of sound waves.
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Chapter 15 Vocabulary Terms acoustics beats cochlea consonance decibel dissonance Doppler effect Fourier’s theorem frequency spectrum microphone musical scale note octave pitch pressure reverberation rhythm shock wave sonogram speaker stereo subsonic supersonic
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Inv 15.2 Sound Waves Investigation Key Question: Does sound behave like other waves?
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15.2 Sound Waves We know sound is a wave because: Sound has both frequency and wavelength. The speed of sound is frequency times wavelength. Resonance happens with sound. Sound can be reflected, refracted, and absorbed and also shows evidence of interference and diffraction.
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15.2 Sound Waves A sound wave is a wave of alternating high- pressure and low-pressure regions of air.
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15.2 Amplitude of sound The amplitude of a sound wave is very small. Even a loud 80 dB noise creates a pressure variation of only a few millionths of an atmosphere.
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15.2 The wavelength of sound
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15.2 The Doppler effect The shift in frequency caused by motion is called the Doppler effect. It occurs when a sound source is moving at speeds less than the speed of sound.
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15.2 The speed of sound The speed of sound in air is 343 meters per second (660 miles per hour) at one atmosphere of pressure and room temperature (21°C). An object is subsonic when it is moving slower than sound.
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15.2 The speed of sound We use the term supersonic to describe motion at speeds faster than the speed of sound. A shock wave forms where the wave fronts pile up. The pressure change across the shock wave is what causes a very loud sound known as a sonic boom.
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15.2 The speed of sound The speed of a sound wave in air depends on how fast air molecules are moving. The speed of sound in materials is often faster than in air.
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15.2 Standing waves and resonance Spaces enclosed by boundaries can create resonance with sound waves. The closed end of a pipe is a closed boundary. An open boundary makes an antinode in the standing wave. Sounds of different frequencies are made by standing waves. A particular sound is selected by designing the length of a vibrating system to be resonant at the desired frequency.
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15.2 Sound waves and boundaries Like other waves, sound waves can be reflected by surfaces and refracted as they pass from one material to another. Sound waves reflect from hard surfaces. Soft materials can absorb sound waves.
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15.2 Fourier's theorem Fourier’s theorem says any complex wave can be made from a sum of single frequency waves.
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15.2 Sound spectrum A complex wave is really a sum of component frequencies. A frequency spectrum is a graph that shows the amplitude of each component frequency in a complex wave.
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