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Wave Properties.

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Presentation on theme: "Wave Properties."— Presentation transcript:

1 Wave Properties

2 Types of Waves Mechanical waves
Water waves, sound waves, waves that travel along a spring or rope Requires a material medium Newton’s laws govern the motion of mechanical waves

3 Types of Waves Electromagnetic waves Light waves, radio waves, X-rays
No medium is needed All travel through space at the speed of light 2.99 x 108m/s Details cannot be observed directly Will use the easily observed mechanical waves as models for the behavior of EM waves

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5 Types of Waves Matter waves
Electrons and other particles show the wave-like behavior under certain conditions Quantum mechanics are needed to describe these properties

6 Mechanical Waves Three different types
Each type disturbs the media in a different way Transverse wave Longitudinal wave Surface wave

7 Transverse Wave Causes the medium to vibrate perpendicularly to the direction of motion of the wave Example: waves in piano and guitar strings

8 Longitudinal Wave Causes the particles of a medium to move parallel to the direction of the wave Example: sound wave Fluids, liquids, gases, or plasma usually only longitudinal

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10 Surface Wave Mixture of transverse and longitudinal waves
Energy of water waves usually comes from storms far away

11 How are waves produced? Wave pulse: single disturbance that travels through a medium A given point was at rest before the pulse reached it; it returned to rest after the pulse passed Created by sudden jerking of the rope to one side and returning to center Traveling wave Created by moving rope side to side in a regular manner A source that is vibrating with simple harmonic motion will produce a continuous travelling wave

12 Measures of a Wave Period (T): shortest time interval over which the motion repeats itself Frequency (f): number of complete vibrations/sec; measure at a fixed location Measured in Hertz (Hz) 1 Hz = 1 vibration/sec F = 1/T

13 Example Problem p291 A sound wave has a frequency of 262 Hz. What is the time between successive wave crests? Given: f = 262 Hz

14 Example Problem p291 A sound wave has a frequency of 262 Hz. What is the time between successive wave crests? Given: f = 262 Hz T=?

15 Example Problem p291 A sound wave has a frequency of 262 Hz. What is the time between successive wave crests? Given: f = 262 Hz T=? F = 1/T

16 Example Problem p291 A sound wave has a frequency of 262 Hz. What is the time between successive wave crests? Given: f = 262 Hz T=? f = 1/T = 1/T T = 1/262 T = 3.82 x 10-3 s

17 Measures of a Wave Wavelength: shortest distance between points where the wave pattern repeats itself Represented by λ Crests: high points of each wave Troughs: low points of each wave Each crest is one wavelength from the next crest; troughs are also spaced by one wavelength V = λ / T or v = λf

18 Measures of a Wave Amplitude
Two waves with the same frequency can have different λ Amplitude: maximum displacement from rest or equilibrium position Example: rope shaken gently vs. violently; sound loud vs. soft; water wave giant tidal vs. ripple To produce a wave with greater amplitude more work has to be done Example: strong winds produce larger water waves than gentle breezes A wave with larger amplitude transfers more energy Double the amplitude then you increase the energy it transfers every second by a factor of 4

19 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave?

20 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave? Given: f = 262 Hz λ = 1.29 m

21 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave? Given: f = 262 Hz λ = 1.29 m v = ?

22 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave? Given: f = 262 Hz λ = 1.29 m v = ? v = λf

23 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave? Given: f = 262 Hz λ = 1.29 m v = ? v = λf v = λf v = (1.29)(262)

24 Example Problem p293 A sound wave with frequency of 262 Hz has a wavelength of 1.29 m. What is the velocity of the sound wave? Given: f = 262 Hz λ = 1.29 m v = ? v = λf v = λf v = (1.29)(262) v = 338 m/s


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