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CP Physics Ms. Morrison
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Mechanical – needs medium Longitudinal Created by vibrations which disturb the medium and transmit the wave energy Sound pulses create compressions and rarefactions Compressions – high pressure, particles pressed together Rarefactions – low pressure, particles expand out
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Frequency = number of pressure oscillations per second (Hz) Pitch = our impression of frequency High pitch = high frequency and vice versa Human range of hearing: 20 – 20,000 Hz ▪ Infrasonic = below 20 Hz ▪ Audible sound = 20 – 20,000 Hz ▪ Ultrasonic = above 20,000 Hz
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Loudness = our impression of sound intensity which is a measure of the wave’s energy (amplitude), measured in decibels (dB) Barely heard = 0 dB Sound 10x louder = 10 dB Sound 100x louder = 20 dB
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Sound waves have all the same properties as other waves Refract Reflect Diffract Interference Reflection of sound = echo
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331 m/s at 0 o C (32 o F) 343 m/s at 20 o C (68 o F) Equation:v = λf As temperature of air increases, so does the speed of sound V sound = 331 m/s + 0.6(ΔT) ΔT = change in temperature from 0 o C Travels fastest through solids, then liquids, and slowest through gases Travels fastest when medium is elastic and molecules close together
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Pitch higher when sound is approaching Pitch lower when sound is moving away Equation:f’ = f [(v + v d )/(v – v s )] f’ = perceived frequency f = actual sound frequency v = speed of sound (assume 343 m/s, unless otherwise specified) v d = velocity of detector (+ towards source, - away from source v s = velocity of source (+towards detector, - away from dectector)
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Human voice (singing) = vocal cords Brass instruments (tuba, trumpet) = musician’s lips Reed instruments (clarinet, saxophone) = reed String instruments (piano, guitar, violin) = string against sounding board Other instruments (flute, recorder) = air moving inside column
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Forced vibration = vibration of an object causes another object or material to vibrate Natural frequency = frequency at which a minimum amount of energy is needed to make object vibrate (need least amount of energy to continue vibrations
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Resonance = forced vibration of object that matches its natural frequency Results in a dramatic increase in the wave’s amplitude – sounds louder Examples: swinging on swing, bridge vibrations, opera singer breaking glass Can cause damage – Tacoma Narrows Bridge (1940) Soldiers “break step” when crossing bridges to prevent resonance
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Interference of sound waves (often occurs during resonance) Constructive – waves are in phase, sound gets louder Destructive – waves are out of phase, sound gets softer or no sound at all
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Beats = difference in frequencies between two sounds heard simultaneously Used to tune instruments – when frequencies are equal, then beat disappears Find beat frequency by taking difference between two frequencies
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Sonar – uses echoes to determine the distance of objects Bats – use echo location to determine distances of objects as they fly Ultrasound – use sound waves to “see” inside humans and other materials Relies on Doppler shift See unborn babies Examine heart (echocardiogram) and other organs
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