1 Two waves passing through the same region will superimpose - e.g. the displacements simply add Two pulses travelling in opposite directions will pass.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Topic 11 – Wave Phenomena.
Advertisements

Chapter 21 Superposition and standing waves
Waves_03 1 Two sine waves travelling in opposite directions  standing wave Some animations courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University TRANSVERSE.
Chapter 11 Waves. Waves l A wave is a disturbance/oscillation generated from its source and travels over long distances. l A wave transports energy but.
Harmonic Series and Spectrograms 220 Hz (A3) Why do they sound different? Instrument 1 Instrument 2Sine Wave.
1 Two waves passing through the same region will superimpose - e.g. the displacements simply add Two pulses travelling in opposite directions will pass.
Chapter 14 Waves and sound Dr. Haykel Abdelhamid Elabidi November/December 2013/Muh 1435.
Sound waves and Perception of sound Lecture 8 Pre-reading : §16.3.
Introduction to Waves. How do you describe the motion of a pulse traveling through the slinky? Watch the video clip: Making_PulsesMaking_Pulses Sketch.
11: Wave Phenomena 11.1 Standing (Stationary) Waves.
A.2 Standing (Stationary) Waves
Principle of Superposition Interference Stationary Waves
Dr. Jie ZouPHY Chapter 18 Superposition and Standing Waves.
7/5/20141FCI. Prof. Nabila M. Hassan Faculty of Computer and Information Fayoum University 2013/2014 7/5/20142FCI.
Physics 102 Superposition Moza M. Al-Rabban Professor of Physics Lecture 7 Interference.
1 If we try to produce a traveling harmonic wave on a rope, repeated reflections from the end produces a wave traveling in the opposite direction - with.
Chapter 18 Superposition and Standing Waves. Waves vs. Particles Waves are very different from particles. Particles have zero size.Waves have a characteristic.
Sound barrier is the buildup of sound waves in front of an object moving near the speed of sound. Sonic boom is created when an object breaks the sound.
Waves and Sound Ch
Chapter 14 Superposition and Standing Waves 2 Waves vs. Particles Particles have zero sizeWaves have a characteristic size – their wavelength Multiple.
Chapter 15 Outline Mechanical Waves
Waves - I Chapter 16 Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 12 Objectives Differentiate between the harmonic series of open and closed pipes. Calculate the harmonics of a vibrating string and of open and.
Sound Waves Sound waves are divided into three categories that cover different frequency ranges Audible waves lie within the range of sensitivity of the.
13.3. Harmonics A vibrating string will produce standing waves whose frequencies depend upon the length of the string. Harmonics Video 2:34.
Stationary Waves Stationary waves are produced by superposition of two progressive waves of equal amplitude and frequency, travelling with the same speed.
Chapter 17 The Principle of Linear Superposition and Interference Phenomena.
FCI. Faculty of Computers and Information Fayoum University 2014/ FCI.
University Physics: Waves and Electricity
University Physics: Waves and Electricity Ch16. Transverse Waves Lecture 3 Dr.-Ing. Erwin Sitompul
Superposition of waves Standing waves on a string Interference Lecture 27: Wave interference.
Chapter 12 Section 3: Harmonics.
University Physics: Waves and Electricity Ch17. Longitudinal Waves Lecture 4 Dr.-Ing. Erwin Sitompul
Waves and Sound AP Physics B. What is a wave A ______ is a vibration or disturbance in space. A _____________ is the substance that all SOUND WAVES travel.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 1 – Waves & Sound b) Wave Motion & Properties.
Sound.
Ch17. The Principle of Linear Superposition and Interference Phenomena
1 General Doppler Formula (Serway convention) f s = frequency emitted by source v S =Velocity of source f L = frequency received by listener v L =Velocity.
Harmonics. Each instrument has a mixture of harmonics at varying intensities Principle of superposition Periodics- Repeating patterns of waveforms.
Waves - I Chapter 16 Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Superposition and Standing Waves
Stationary Waves Stationary waves are produced by superposition of two progressive waves.
 Wave energy depends on amplitude, the more amplitude it has, the more energy it has.
FCI. Faculty of Computer and Information Fayoum University FCI.
Traveling Waves Standing Waves Musical Instruments Musical Instruments all work by producing standing waves. There are three types of instrument.
Adding waves can be positive or negative.. Superposition  When two (or more) waves interfere (meet… they’re at the same place at the same time) the resultant.
6  When waves are combined in systems with boundary conditions, only certain allowed frequencies can exist. › We say the frequencies are quantized.
University Physics: Waves and Electricity
University Physics: Waves and Electricity
Chapter 15 Mechanical Waves.
Standing Wave & Resonance
(Road to discuss harmony)
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Principle of Superposition Interference Stationary Waves
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Waves.
Standing waves.
WAVES.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم FCI.
Standing Waves Waves and Sound
Introduction to physics
LECTURE Ch 15 & 16 SOUND WAVES IN AIR
Wave Interactions.
11-3: PROPERTIES OF WAVES.
11-3: PROPERTIES OF WAVES.
Lecture 7 Ch 16 Standing waves
University Physics: Waves and Electricity
Principle of Linear Superposition and Interference Phenomena
14-7 Superposition and Interference
Combining results gives us the case where both observer and source are moving:
Presentation transcript:

1 Two waves passing through the same region will superimpose - e.g. the displacements simply add Two pulses travelling in opposite directions will pass through each other unaffected While passing, the displacement is simply the sum of the individual displacements CP 514 SUPERPOSITION OF WAVES waves_02 Animations courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University

2 waves_02: MINDMAP SUMMARY – SUPERPOSITION PRINCIPLE Travelling waves, superposition principle, interference, constructive interference, destructive interference, intermediate interference, nodes, antinodes, phase, phase difference, in phase, out of phase, path difference, two point interference, standing waves on strings, standing waves in air columns, thin film interference Superposition (at time t o ) Wave 1 + Wave 2 Constructive interference:  = m m = 0, 1, 2, 3,...  = m (2  ) Destructive interference:  = ( m + 1/2)  = ( m + ½) (2  ) 14 15

3 CP 510 SUPERPOSITION  INTERFERENCE In phase  constructive interference Out of phase  destructive interference

4 Problem 1 Two sine waves travelling in the same direction  Constructive and Destructive Interference Two sine waves travelling in opposite directions  standing wave

5 Interference of two overlapping travelling waves depends on: * relative phases of the two waves * relative amplitudes of the two waves fully constructive interference: if each wave reaches a max at the same time, waves are in phase (phase difference between waves two waves  = 0) greatest possible amplitude ( y max1 + y max2 ) fully destructive interference: one wave reaches a max and the other a min at the same time, waves are out phase (phase difference between two waves  =  rad), lowest possible amplitude |y max1 - y max2 | intermediate interference: 0 < phase difference  <  rad or  < phase difference  < 2  

6 A phase difference of 2  rad corresponds to a shift of one wavelength between two waves. For m = 0, 1, 2, 3 fully constructive interference  phase difference = m fully destructive interference  phase difference = (m + ½) SUPERPOSITION  INTERFERENCE

7 Which graph corresponds to constructive, destructive and intermediate interference ? AB C SUPERPOSITION  INTERFERENCE

8 What do these pictures tell you ? SUPERPOSITION  INTERFERENCE

Problem solving strategy: I S E E I dentity: What is the question asking (target variables) ? What type of problem, relevant concepts, approach ? S et up: Diagrams Equations Data (units) Physical principals E xecute: Answer question Rearrange equations then substitute numbers E valuate: Check your answer – look at limiting cases sensible ? units ? significant figures ? PRACTICE ONLY MAKES PERMANENT 9

10 CP 523 SUPERPOSITION  INTERFERENCE

11 Problem 2 Two small loudspeakers emit pure sinusoidal waves that are in phase. (a) What frequencies does a loud sound occur at a point P? (b) What frequencies will the sound be very soft? (v sound = 344 m.s -1 ). CP 523

Solution 2 Construction interference Destructive interference  1.27 kHz, 2.55 kHz, 3.82 kHz, …, 19.1 kHz  0.63 kHz, 1.91 kHz, 3.19 kHz,…, 19.7 kHz

Two speakers placed 3.00 m apart are driven by the same oscillator. A listener is originally at Point O, which is located 8.00 m from the center of the line connecting the two speakers. The listener then walks to point P, which is a perpendicular distance m from O, before reaching the first minimum in sound intensity. What is the frequency of the oscillator? Take speed of sound in air to be 343 m.s -1. Problem 3

14 A sinusoidal sound wave of frequency f is a pure tone A note played by an instrument is not a pure tone - its wavefunction is not of sinusoidal form The wavefunction is a superposition (sum) of a sinusoidal wavefunction at f (fundamental or 1st harmonic), plus one at 2f (second harmonic or 1st overtone) plus one at 3f (third harmonic or second overtone) etc, with progressively decreasing amplitudes The harmonic waves with different frequencies which sum to the final wave are called a Fourier series. Breaking up the original wave into its sinusoidal components is called Fourier analysis. CP 521 FOURIER ANALYSIS

15 Waveform Fundamental 1st overtone 2nd overtone 1st harmonic 2nd harmonic 3rd harmonic Superimpose  resultant (add) waveform CP 521

16 FOURIER ANALYSIS  any wave pattern can be decomposed into a superposition of appropriate sinusoidal waves. FOURIER SYNTHESIS  any wave pattern can be constructed as a superposition of appropriate sinusoidal waves A n = A 1 / n f n = n f 1 Electronic Music ??? CP 521

Quality of Sound Timbre or tone color or tone quality piano music noise Frequency spectrum Harmonics superposition/superposition.html

Some of the animations are from the web site

19 The Physics Teacher Vol 33, Feb 1995 INTERFERENCE PATTERNS AND LANDING AIRCRAFT Aircraft are guided in landing with the aid of the interference pattern from two aerials A1 and A2 about 40 m apart. The aerials emit coherent waves at 30 MHz. The wavelength is = c / f = 10 m. The lines of maximum signal strength are shown in the diagram. The number of lines emanating between the aerials depends upon the wavelength and the distance between the aerials such that centre line corresponds to the central maximum. The plane should fly along the line of the central maximum. If a plane flies along an adjacent (weaker) line of maximum signal strength, the planes position can be in error by about 500 m. Aerials are also placed so a vertical interference pattern is set up so that the height of the plane can be controlled to fly along this central maximum.