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1 Waves 3 Lecture 3 - Introduction to Waves Waves and the wave equation D Aims: ëReview of wave motion: > “Snapshots” and “waveforms”; > Wave equation. ëHarmonic waves: > Phase velocity. ëRepresentation of waves. > Plane waves: > 1-, 2-, and 3-D waves. > Spherical waves.
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2 Waves 3 Waveforms and Snapshots D Waves as travelling disturbances. A scalar wave is specified by a single-valued function of space and time. In 1-D: = ( x,t ). ëConsider 3 snapshots of wave moving from left to right (in the +ve x-direction): ë No change in shape, so D Wave ëTravelling in +ve x-direction: ëTravelling in -ve x-direction: Wave velocity
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3 Waves 3 Wave equation D Disturbance in time (at fixed x) D Wave equation: Relates the two, second-order, partial derivatives of (x,t) = f(x - vt). The chain rule gives, with u = x - vt. (also works for waves in -ve x-direction) Snapshot at t o Waveform at x o 1-D wave equation
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4 Waves 3 Wave equation: superposition D Important features: ëGenerality: no specification of the type of wave. Linearity: all terms in are raised to first power only. Superposition is, thus, an implicit property. Superposition: Superposition: consider = 1 + 2. If 1 and 2 are solutions so is . ëAny linear combination of solutions is also a solution. > Basis of justification for Fourier analysis to describe wave properties. i.e. superposition of harmonic waves with different frequencies.
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5 Waves 3 Harmonic waves Wave varies sinusoidally Wave varies sinusoidally (with both x and t ). Require f(x-vt) {or equivalently f(t-x/v) } for a wave in the +ve x-direction. For harmonic dependence we need f(u) ~ e i u. k is the wave-number, given by k = 2 /. v = /k - Phase velocity of the wave ëIn -ve x-direction D Nomenclature and convention: ëThe following are equally valid for a wave in the +ve x-direction: There is no “agreed convention”. In general we use the i( t-kx) form. The i(kx- t) form is common in optics and quantum theory. ëThe following are equivalent: Use this form
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6 Waves 3 Plane waves (sect 2.2) D Plane waves: In a 3-D medium = (x,y,z,t). For a wave propagating in the +ve x-direction (x,y,z,t) = A(y,z)e i( t-kx). If A(y,z) = constant, we have a plane wave. Surfaces of constant phase (i.e. t-kx = const) are called wavefronts. They are locally perpendicular to the direction of propagation. Propagation in an arbitrary direction (defined by a unit vector n ).
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7 Waves 3 3-D plane-wave D Wavevector ëPhase at Q = phase at P Vector is the wavevector. It is in the direction of propagation and has magnitude 2 /. D General 3-D plane-wave ë it is the solution of the 3-D wave equation Wavevector Wave equation Plane wave
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8 Waves 3 Spherical waves D Waves expanding symmetrically from a point source. ëConservation of energy demands the amplitude decreases with distance from the source. Since energy is proportional to | | 2, energy flowing across a sphere of radius r is proportional to 4 r 2 | | 2. Thus 1/r. ëSpherical wave: ëAt large r, it approximates a plane wave. D Summary ëGeneral wave: ë1-D wave equation ë3-D plane wave ë3-D wave equation ëSpherical wave Spherical wave
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