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Waves, Sound and Light Wave Properties
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What is a wave? Disturbance or vibration that transmits energy but not matter Examples… Sound, light, radiowaves, earthquakes
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Types of Waves Mechanical Waves- Use a medium
Transverse waves- particles move perpendicular to wave motion Longitudinal Waves- particles move parallel to wave motion A longitudinal wave example is when you compress or stretch the spring. Remember a wave is motion of energy. A medium is substance the wave is transported in.
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Parts Of A Wave Crest-top of the wave Trough- Bottom of the wave
Amplitude (A)-height from resting position Wavelength (λ)- distance travelled by a single wave On a longintunal Wave- crests- compressed regions troughs- stretched regions wavelength is still crest to crest or trough to trough
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Frequency and Period Period (T)- time for one complete cycle or wavelength (in s) Frequency (f)- number of waves per second (Hertz, Hz) Hertz=1/s or s-1 Frequency and period are reciprocals of themselves f= 1/T T= 1/f They are inversely proportional
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Example Playing middle C on a piano produces a sound with a frequency of 256 Hz. What is the period of the sound wave? f= 256 Hz T=? T=1/f T=1/256 T=0.004 s A hertz is 1/s, so when you take the reciprocal of frequency the unit is converted into seconds
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Speed of Waves Remember V=d/t
So to get speed we need distance and time A single wave Distance travelled is one wavelength, λ Time is one period, T Velocity of a wave=wavelength x frequency v=λf Remember f=1/T
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Example An air horn sound at a frequency of 220 Hz. If the speed of sound in air is 330 m/s, what is the wavelength of the sound wave? 1.5 m
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Example The distance between successive crest in a series of water is 4.0 m, and the crests travel 8.6 m in 5.0 seconds. Calculate the frequency of a block of wood bobbing up and down on these water waves. λ= 4.0 m d=8.6 m t=5.0 s f=? V=λf V=d/t V= 8.6/5 V=1.72 m/s 1.72=4f f= 0.43 hz
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Waves Interference
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Interference Two different material objects can not occupy the same space at the same time Waves are not matter but they can displace matter Waves can occupy the same place at the same time When waves overlap it is called superposition
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Constructive Interference
Two waves superimposing that are on the same side of equilibrium They will enhance each other or add up Same side of equilibrium- they are both on the top In the first and last image- notice that after they superimpose they return to their original state
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Destructive Interference
Waves are on opposite sides of equilibrium They will weaken each other or subtract
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Standing Waves A wave that remains in constant position
Can occur when a medium is moving in the opposite direction or when two waves interfere with each other, or constructive and destructive interference
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Reflection From a Boundary
When waves hit a boundary the wave will be reflected If the boundary is fixed the wave will be reflected AND INVERTED If the boundary is free the wave will just be reflected A free boundary- a rope that is loosely tied to a pole, it is able to rotate
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Standing Waves If a series of waves are sent along a string the reflected pulse will interfere with itself If the waves are sent at just the right frequency we will create a standing wave Maximum Wavelength on a standing wave is 2L Both ends have to be nodes The possible wavelengths here are 2L (b) This is only ½ of a wave so the wavelength is twice the length of the string, L (c) this is a full wave and the length of the string is equal to one wavelength, and 2/3L (d) this is 1 and ½ waves, so the wavelength is 2/3 the length of the string
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Antinodes and Nodes Areas of complete destructive interference have NO amplitude are nodes Areas of complete constructive interference have LARGE amplitudes are antinodes
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Waves Sound
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Sound Begins with a vibrating object Is a longitudinal wave
The compression is where density and pressure are at a maximum (crest) The rarefaction is the region are the minimum points (trough)
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Sound Characteristics
Needs a medium to travel The higher the temperature the faster Higher temp=more energy=more vibrations The more dense the faster Vibrations will occur more quickly if the molecules are closer together Pitch is determined by frequency Volume is determined by amplitude
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Clicker Question Which statement is true?
A) If a tree fell in outer space no one can hear it B) A dog whistle has produces sounds that have a high amplitude C) If you are at a concert all of the sound waves have a high frequency D) Sound travels faster in air than water A Sound can not travel in a vacuum or space! It needs a medium B- pitch= high frequency C- Loud=high amplitude D- water=denser so the sound waves travel faster
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Clicker question Which medium would have faster sound waves?
A) Gas (at 0 degrees) B) Liquid (at 0 degrees) C) Solid (at 0 degrees) C
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Minimum and Maximum Frequency
Frequency pertains to pitch not loudness Minimum- 20 Hertz Below- infrasonic waves Maximum- 20,000 Hertz Above-ultrasonic waves What are the corresponding wavelengths if the speed of sound in air is 343 m/s?
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The Doppler Effect When there is movement involved there is an observed change in frequency This can be seen with all types of waves Imagine a bug bouncing up and down on the water, now imagine that bug skimming along the surface of the pond. The waves in back have a longer wavelength and a lower f, the waves in front have a shorter wavelength and a higher frequency
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The Doppler Effect You hear a high pitch as an ambulance approaches you and as soon as it passes the pitch decreases suddenly Compared to the noise being right beside you It has a higher pitch as it approaches you It is a lower pitch when it moves away from you Radar guns work with the doppler effect too. The radar hits the
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The Red Shift Red light has the longest wavelength (colors)
When we look at other galaxies we notice that their colors are shifted towards red This is due to the Doppler effect What does this indicate? The universe is expanding Speed of a radar gun can be estimated by measuring the difference in frequency between emitted and reflected radar waves
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Resonance Objects/Substances can have a natural frequency in which it will begin to vibrate when that frequency strikes the object If another object begins emitting that wave at that natural frequency then the second object will begin to vibrate at the same frequency Example opera singer shattering glass, musical cups
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Standing Waves/Harmonics
On a string standing waves are made b-1st harmonic natural frequency c-2nd harmonic 1st overtone One octave higher d-3rd harmonic 2nd Overtone
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Electromagnetic Waves and Light
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Types of Waves Mechanical Waves Use a Medium
Traverse (ocean waves) and Longitudinal (springs and sound) Electromagnetic Waves Do not require a medium Are transverse waves Are formed when an electric field is coupled with a magnetic field Light, microwaves, radiowaves etc
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
Rabbits Mate In Visible Unusual eXspensive Gardens Radio, Microwaves, Infrared, Visible, Ultraviolet, X-rays, Gamma Rays ROYGBIV Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet
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Visible Light White light is a mixture of different colors
Red light has the longest wavelength (700 nm) Violet has the shortest (400 nm) ROYGBIV
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EM Radiation Is emitted from energized matter
After energy is absorbed by matter it is emitted as EM radiation
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Speed of Light The speed of light=c
The speed of light is 3.0 x 108 m/s in a vacuum IF there is a medium the speed will depend on the type of medium Denser=slower
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Example The sun is 1.50 x 108 km from Earth. How long does it take for the light from the Sun to reach us? d=1.50 x 108 km d=1.50 x 1011 m c=3.0 x 108 m/s t=? v=d/t 500 seconds or 8.3 min
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Example What is the frequency of red light if the wavelength is 700 nm? λ=700 nm λ=7.0 x 10-9 m c=3.0 x 108 m/s f=? v=λf c=λf
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Waves, Sound and Light Snell’s Law
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Wave Speed Wave Speed depends on the medium
When waves travel from one medium into another the speed will change As the waves moves to more shallow water the waves slow down
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Wave Speed Waves traveling perpendicular to the new medium (θi=0 or angle of incidence) continue in the same direction Velocity changes, but the frequency stays constant Soo.. Wavelength will change When waves are not perpendicular they will bend
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Refraction Refraction-bending of a wave due to changing medium
Optical Density- a measure of how difficult it is for light to travel in a substance Vacuum<air<water<glass<diamond
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Angles Angle of Incidence Angle of refraction
Angle between the incident ray (original wave/ray) and the normal Angle of refraction Angle between the refracted ray and the normal
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Snell’s Law When light travels from
Less dense to more dense medium it slows down and bends towards the normal More dense to less dense medium it speeds up and bends away from the normal
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Snell’s Law nisinθi=nrsinθr ni=index of refraction (first medium)
θi=angle of incidence nr=index of refraction (second medium) θr=angle of refraction
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Index Medium n Vacuum 1 Crown glass 1.52 Air 1.0003 Quartz 1.54 Water
1.33 Flint Glass 1.61 Ethanol 1.36 Diamond 2.42
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Example A ray of light traveling in air strikes a block of quartz at an angle of 15 degrees. Find the angle of refraction. Draw a diagram.
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Example A ray of light travels from underwater into air. It travels in the air at an angle of 65 degrees, find the incident angle. Draw a diagram.
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Index of Refraction n=c/v n=index of refraction
c=speed of light in vacuum 3.0 x108 m/s v= speed of light in substance
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Example What is the speed of light in water? c=3.0 x 108 m/s n=1.33
v=? n=c/v
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Total Internal Reflection
When passing from a more dense to a less dense medium, light reflects away from the normal If the angle of large enough then the angle of refraction will be parallel to the medium boundary (θr=90 degrees)
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Critical Angle Critical Angle- θi that results in θr = 90
Total internal reflection- the wave does not pass into the next medium, occurs when θi>θc
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Example Find the Critical angle for light traveling from water into air. Draw diagram ni=1.33 nr=1.0003 θr=90 θc=? Or θi nisinθi=nrsinθr
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Waves, Sound, and Light Reflection
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Reflection When a wave travels into a new medium some will be reflected back The amount of reflection will depend on different the media are
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Law of Reflection Light reflected from a plane (flat) mirror follows this law Angle of Incidence= Angle of Reflection θi=θr These angles are measured from the normal, the line perpendicular to the mirror
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Ray Diagram- Flat (Plane)Mirror
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Regular Reflection Versus Diffuse Reflection
Does not reflect an image You can see a reflected image
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Plane Mirror Ray Diagrams
When you look at an image in a plane mirror it is The same size The same distance behind the mirror as you are in front of it Right side up and laterally inverted The reflected light has the same speed, wavelength and frequency as the incident light
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Curved Mirrors Concave- curved inwards Convex-curved outwards
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Ray Diagrams Convex Concave
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Definitions Principal Axis- Line through the center of the mirror
Center of Curvature (C)-center of spherical mirror (center of the circle if the mirror was a complete circle) Focal Point (F)- point where all light converges (all rays pass this point) Focal length (f) distance from F to mirror and from C to F
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Find the focal point
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Focal Length 1 = 1 + 1 f do di f=focal length
do = distance of object from mirror di= distance of image from mirror Can be used for mirrors and lenses
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Example An object is 15 mm in front of a concave mirror, and the image is 4.0 mm behind the lens. What is the focal length of the lens? do=15 mm di = 4 mm f=? 1 = 1 + 1 f do di 1/f=1/15 + 1/4 1/f=.3166 f=3.15 mm
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Diffraction and Polarization
Diffraction- waves can bend around objects White light can be split into multiple colors, with a diffraction grating in a prism
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