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MT 6 LT 1 Mechanical Waves What are waves?
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Background Knowledge: Waves
What are some examples of waves? Why are waves important?
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What causes waves? Waves are created when a source of Energy causes a medium to vibrate. WAVES NEED ENERGY TO MOVE A vibration is a repeated back and forth or up and down motion.
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What are the different types of Wave?
Mechanical Waves Sound Waves Electromagnetic Waves
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This LT will focus on Mechanical Waves
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What are mechanical waves?
Definition: A disturbance that transfers energy from place to place. They need a source of energy to produce it
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How are waves & energy related?
A wave transports energy along a Medium without transporting matter.
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Mediums & Waves What do mechanical waves move through? A medium
Mechanical waves require a medium in order to travel from one place to another Can be gas, liquid, or solid. Waves in different mediums travel at different speeds.
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Mediums & Waves What do mechanical waves move through?
Mechanical Waves do NOT move the medium from one place to another Note that Not all waves require a medium to travel. Example: Light from the sun travels through empty space.
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What determines the speed of a Mechanical Wave?
The speed of a wave is determined by its: Wavelength x Frequency
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What are the different types of Mechanical Waves?
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What are the different types of Mechanical Waves?
Waves are classified according to how they move. 3 types of Waves: Transverse Wave Longitudinal Wave Surface Wave
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What is a Transverse Wave?
A wave that travels in the opposite direction (perpendicular) to the medium in which it is traveling through Transverse means across.
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Basic Properties of Transverse Waves (What are the parts of a Transverse Wave?)
Crest Trough Amplitude Energy Wavelength
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Basic Properties of Transverse Waves (What are the parts of a Transverse Wave?)
Crest The highest point of the wave above the rest position Trough The lowest point below the rest position
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Transverse Wave: Amplitude
Amplitude is the distance from the rest to crest or rest to trough. The farther a medium moves as it vibrates, the larger the amplitude. Rest
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Transverse Wave: Amplitude
The Amplitude tells us the amount of energy being transported. High Energy = High Amplitude Low Energy = Low Amplitude.
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Transverse: Wavelength
A wave travels a certain distance before it repeats. When it repeats, it is knows as the Wavelength The wavelength is the distance between 2 corresponding (same/related) parts of a wave . Measured from crest to crest or trough to trough.
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Wave Height The distance from one crest to one trough (trough to crest too)
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Draw a Transverse Wave and label: crest & trough
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Properties of Longitudinal/Compressional Waves
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Longitudinal Wave The vibration of the medium is the same direction (parallel) to the direction in which the wave travels. Example: Slinky
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Longitudinal Wave Rarefactions Compressions:
The parts where the coils are close together Rarefactions the parts where the coils are spread out
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What is a Surface Wave?
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Surface Waves A wave that travels along a surface separating two media
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