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Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 1 Physics 101: Lecture 21 Waves.

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Presentation on theme: "Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 1 Physics 101: Lecture 21 Waves."— Presentation transcript:

1 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 1 Physics 101: Lecture 21 Waves

2 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 2 Waves Overview l Types l Speed l Traveling (“harmonic”) l Superposition l Standing 05

3 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 3 Types of Waves l Longitudinal: The medium oscillates in the same direction as the wave is moving è Sound l Transverse: The medium oscillates perpendicular to the direction the wave is moving. è Water 8

4 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 4 Slinky Preflight 3 Suppose that a longitudinal wave moves along a Slinky at a speed of 5 m/s. Does one coil of the slinky move through a distance of five meters in one second? 1. Yes 2. No 5m 12

5 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 5 Velocity of Waves Act 17 A spring and slinky are attached and stretched. Compare the speed of the wave pulse in the slinky with the speed of the wave pulse in the spring. A) v slinky > v spring B) v slinky = v spring C) v slinky < v spring

6 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 6 Traveling (“harmonic”) Waves Wavelength Wavelength: The distance between identical points on the wave. Amplitude: The maximum displacement A of a point on the wave. Amplitude A A 20 y(x,t) = A cos(  t–kx) Angular Frequency  : x y Wave Number k: Recall: f = v /

7 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 7 Period and Velocity l Period: The time T for a point on the wave to undergo one complete oscillation. Speed: The wave moves one wavelength in one period T so its speed is v =  / T. 22 f = v /

8 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 8 Traveling Waves Exercise y(x,t) = A cos(  t –kx) Label axis and tic marks if the graph shows a snapshot of the wave y(x,t) = 2 cos(4t –2x) at x=0. t +2 -2  / 2  /4  /4 25

9 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 9 Preflight 1+2 Suppose a traveling wave moves through some medium. If the period of the wave is increased, what happens to the wavelength of the wave assuming the speed of the wave remains the same? 1. The wavelength increases 2. The wavelength remains the same 3. The wavelength decreases 26

10 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 10 l The wavelength of microwaves generated by a microwave oven is about 3 cm. At what frequency do these waves cause the water molecules in your burrito to vibrate ? (a) 1 GHz (b) 10 GHz (c) 100 GHz ACT 29

11 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 11 Recall that v = f. HH O ACT Solution 30

12 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 12 Absorption coefficient of water as a function of frequency. f = 10 GHz Visible “water window” 31

13 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 13 Interference and Superposition l When two waves overlap, the amplitudes add. è Constructive: increases amplitude è Destructive: decreases amplitude 34

14 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 14 Reflection Act l A slinky is connected to a wall at one end. A pulse travels to the right, hits the wall and is reflected back to the left. The reflected wave is A) InvertedB) Upright 37

15 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 15 Standing Waves Fixed Endpoints l Fundamental n=1 (2 nodes) n = 2L/n f n = v/ =n v / (2L) 44

16 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 16 Standing Waves: f 1 = fundamental frequency (lowest possible) L  / 2 48 A guitar’s E-string has a length of 65 cm and is stretched to a tension of 82N. If it vibrates with a fundamental frequency of 329.63 Hz, what is the mass of the string?

17 Physics 101: Lecture 21, Pg 17Summary l Wave Types è Transverse (eg pulse on string, water) è Longitudinal (sound, slinky) l Traveling  y(x,t) = A cos(  t –kx) or A sin(  t – kx) l Superposition è Just add amplitudes l Reflection (fixed point inverts wave) l Standing Waves (fixed ends)  n = 2L/n è f n = n v / 2L 50


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