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Published byWilfred Davidson Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 12: Sound A few (selected) topics on sound
Sound: A special kind of wave. Sound waves: Longitudinal mechanical waves in a medium (not necessarily air!). Another definition of sound (relevant to biology): A physical sensation that stimulates the ears. Sound waves: Need a source: A vibrating object Energy is transferred from source through medium with longitudinal waves. Detected by some detector (could be electronic detector or ears).
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Section 12-1: Characteristics of Sound
Sound: Longitudinal mechanical wave in medium Source: A vibrating object (like a drum head).
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Sound: A longitudinal mechanical wave traveling in any medium.
Needs a medium in which to travel! Cannot travel in a vacuum. Science fiction movies (Star Trek, Star Wars), in which sounds of battle are heard through vacuum of space are WRONG!! Speed of sound: Depends on the medium!
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Speed of Sound 10
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Loudness: Related to sound wave energy (next section).
Pitch: Pitch Frequency (f) Human Ear: Responds to frequencies in the range: 20 Hz f 20,000 Hz f > 20,000 Hz Ultrasonic f < 20 Hz Infrasonic
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Example 12-2
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Sound waves can be considered pressure waves:
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Section 12-2: Sound Intensity
Loudness: A sensation, but also related to sound wave intensity. From Ch. 11: Intensity of wave: I (Power)/(Area) = P/A (W/m2) Also, from Ch. 11: Intensity of spherical wave: I (1/r2) (I2/I1) = (r1)2/(r2)2
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Human Ear: Can detect sounds of intensity: 10-12 W/m2 I 1 W/m2
“Loudness” A subjective sensation, but also made quantitative using sound wave intensity. Human Ear: Can detect sounds of intensity: 10-12 W/m2 I 1 W/m2 Sounds with I > 1 W/m2 are painful! Note that the range of I varies over 1012! “Loudness” increases with I, but is not simply I
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Loudness The larger the sound intensity I, the louder the sound.
But a sound 2 as loud requires a 10 increase in I! Instead of I, conventional loudness scale uses log10(I) (logarithm to the base 10) Loudness Unit bel or (1/10) bel decibel (dB) Define: Loudness of sound, intensity I (measured in decibels): β 10 log10(I/I0) I0 = A reference intensity Minimum intensity sound a human ear can hear I0 1.0 W/m2
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Loudness of sound, intensity I (in decibels):
β 10 log10(I/I0), I0 1.0 W/m2 For example the loudness of a sound with intensity I = 1.0 W/m2 is: β = 10 log10(I/I0) = 10 log10(102) = 20 dB Quick logarithm review (See Appendix A): log10(1) = 0, log10(10) = 1, log10(102) = 2 log10(10n) = n, log10(a/b) = log10(a) - log10(b) Increase I by a factor of 10: Increase loudness β by 10 dB
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Loudness Intensity
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Section 12-4: Sound Sources
Source of sound Any vibrating object! Musical instruments: Cause vibrations by Blowing, striking, plucking, bowing, … These vibrations are standing waves produced by the source: Vibrations at the natural (resonant) frequencies. Pitch of musical instrument: Determined by lowest resonant frequency: The fundamental.
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Frequencies for musical notes
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Recall: Standing waves on strings (instruments):
Only allowed frequencies ( harmonics) are: fn = (v/λn) = (½)n(v/L) fn = nf1 , n = 1, 2, 3, … f1 = (½)(v/L) fundamental Mainly use f1 Change by changing L (with finger or bow) Also change by changing tension FT & thus v: v = [FT/(m/L)]½
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Stringed instruments (standing waves with nodes at both ends): Fundamental frequency
L = (½)λ1 λ1 = 2L f1 = (v/λ1) = (½)(v/L) Put finger (or bow) on string: Choose L & thus fundamental f1. Vary L, get different f1. Vary tension FT & m/L & get different v: v = [FT/(m/L)]½ & thus different f1.
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Guitar & all stringed instruments have sounding boards or boxes to amplify the sound!
Examples 12-7 & 12-8
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Wind instruments: Use standing waves (in air) within tubes or pipes.
Strings: standing waves Nodes at both ends. Tubes: Similar to strings, but also different! Closed end of tube must be a node, open end must be antinode!
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Standing Waves: Open-Open Tubes
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Standing Waves: Open-Closed Tubes
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Summary: Wind instruments:
Tube open at both ends: Standing waves: Pressure nodes (displacement antinodes) both ends: Fundamental frequency & harmonics: L = (½)λ1 λ1 = 2L f1 = (v/λ1) = (½)(v/L) fn = (v/λn) = (½)n(v/L) or fn = nf1 , n = 1, 2, 3, … Basically the same as for strings.
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Summary: Wind instruments :
Tube closed at one end: Standing waves: Pressure node (displacement antinode) at end. Pressure antinode (displacement node) at the other end. Fundamental frequency & harmonics: L = (¼)λ1 λ1 = 4L f1 = (v/λ1) = (¼)(v/L) fn = (v/λn) = (¼)n(v/L) or fn = nf1 , n = 1, 3, 5,… (odd harmonics only!) Very different than for strings & tubes open at both ends.
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