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Published byRegina Reed Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Sound
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2 Sound Waves Sound waves travel as compression waves. Another name for compression waves is longitudinal waves
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3 Factors affecting speed of sound Temperature – Sound moves through hot air faster than cold air due to the increased speed of the particles. Type of medium – Sound moves well through dense material and material that returns quickly to its original position.
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4 Factors affecting speed of sound Thus, sound moves fastest in a solid and slowest in a gas Sound travels more quickly through solids and liquids because the individual molecules are closer together than the molecules in gas Sound waves CANNOT move through a vacuum – they need a medium!
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Bells in a bell jar… 5
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6 Decibels The decibel is the unit used to measure sound intensity or loudness. Loudness corresponds to the amplitude of a wave.
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7 Decibels Sounds greater than 120 dB can cause pain in human ears. Sounds with an amplitude between 0 dB and 120 dB are called audible. Anything below 0 dB is considered subaudible.
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Decibel drag races 8
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9 Frequency and Pitch Pitch – how high or low a sound is. High pitch = high frequency Low pitch = low frequency
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10 Frequency and Pitch Humans can hear pitches that have a frequency between 20 Hz and 20,000 Hz Pitches above 20,000 Hz are called ultrasonic. Pitches below 20 Hz are called subsonic.
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Phone Tone Generators 11
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12 Doppler Effect The Doppler effect is a change in the frequency or pitch of a sound that is caused by either the movement of the source or the observer of the wave. Example: The sound from an ambulance siren changes as it approaches the listener
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13 Doppler Effect First observed in 1842 by Christian Andreas Doppler The Big Bang Theory - Doppler Costume Video explaining the Physics of the Doppler Effect
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14 Resonance Resonance is the vibration of an object at its natural frequency. Example: Windows rattle when the sound from a passing truck matches the window’s natural resonance.
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Resonance of different things 15
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16 Nodes and Anti-nodes Node – A place where two waves meet and destructively interfere so that the displacement is zero
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17 Nodes and Anti-nodes Anti-node – the point of largest amplitude when two waves interfere constructively
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18 Music – Natural Frequency A natural frequency exists without any driving source. It is a natural frequency if its waveform has nodes that match up with the ends of the object. The lowest frequency at which this occurs is the fundamental, or the 1 st Harmonic.
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19 Music - Harmonics Harmonics – a sound wave with a pitch that is a multiple of the natural frequency Overtone – has a higher frequency than the fundamental Octave = ½ or double the frequency of a sound; 8 notes on the musical scale
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21 Music Consonance – multiple waves combining to form a pleasant sound Dissonance – multiple waves combining to form an unpleasant sound Acoustics – the control of noise and the vibrations that cause noise
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Toccata Fugue in D Minor 22
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23 Music – open pipe resonators Open pipe resonators – both ends are open Examples: brass instruments, flutes, saxophones It reflects an inverted wave
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24 Music - Closed pipe resonators Closed pipe resonators – have one end enclosed Example: pan-flute, blowing across a bottle top, hanging pipes under marimbas, xylophones
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25 Priorities for today… Fill out “How Well Did I Take Notes – Sound” (TURN IN) Complete Wave Crossword (TURN IN) Complete 3 vocab words(KEEP) Wave Foldable – due next class Homework – Wave Ranking (KEEP) QUIZ on SOUND next class
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