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Doppler Effect Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11.

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Presentation on theme: "Doppler Effect Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11."— Presentation transcript:

1 Doppler Effect Physics 202 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11

2 PAL #10 Music  How much would your eardrum move from a tuning fork sound?  Example: f = 440 Hz,  = 90 dB  = (10 dB) log (I/I 0 ) I = I 0 10 (  /10) I = (10 -12 ) 10 (90/10) We need to relate I to s m : I = ½  v  2 s m 2 s m = (I/½  v  2 ) ½  Air density =  = 1.21 kg/m 3  Velocity of sound = v = 343 m/s

3 PAL #10 Music (cont.) s m = (I/(½  v(2  f) 2 )) ½ s m = (1X10 -3 /(½)(1.21)(343)(2  440) 2 ) ½  Even the loudest sounds only produce very small motions  What if the distance is doubled?  Since I = P s /4  r 2, then I 2 = (1/4)I 1   The displacement is ½ as great

4 If the density of air doubles (with no other changes) what happens to the intensity of sound in that air? a)Decreases by square root of 2 b)Decreases by factor of 2 c)Stays the same d)Doubles e)Increases by square root of 2

5 Consider two sound detectors. Detector A is 1 meter away from a sound source and detector B is 3 meters away. If each detector receives the same amount of energy per second, what is the ratio of the areas of the detectors (area A/area B)? a)1/9 b)1/3 c)1 d)3 e)9

6 The Doppler Effect   If there is any relative motion between the two, the frequency of sound detected will differ from the frequency of sound emitted  Example: the change in frequency of a car’s engine as it passes you

7 Stationary Source

8 Moving Source

9 How Does the Frequency Change?  If the source and the detector are moving closer together the frequency increases   If the source and the detector are moving further apart the frequency decreases 

10 Doppler Effect

11 Doppler Effect and Velocity   The greater the change the larger the velocity   Let us consider separately the situations where either the source or the detector is moving and the other is not

12 Stationary Source, Moving Detector  In general f = v/ but if the detector is moving then the effective velocity is v+v D and the new frequency is:  but =v/f so,  If the detector is moving away from the source than the sign is negative f’ = f (v  v D /v)

13 Moving Source, Stationary Detector  In general = v/f but if the source is moving the wavelengths are smaller by v S /f ’ = v/f - v S /f f’ = v / (v/f - v S /f)  The the source is moving away from the detector then the sign is positive f’ = f (v/v  v S )

14 General Doppler Effect  We can combine the last two equations and produce the general Doppler effect formula: f’ = f ( v±v D / v±v S )  What sign should be used?   For motion toward the sign should be chosen to increase f’   Remember that the speed of sound (v) will often be 343 m/s

15 The Sound Barrier   The wavefronts get closer and closer together as the source moves faster and faster   In 1947 Chuck Yeager flew the X-1 faster than the speed of sound (~760 mph)  This is dangerous because passing through the shockwave makes the plane hard to control  In 1997 the Thrust SSC broke the sound barrier on land

16 Bell X-1

17

18 Thrust SSC

19 Doppler Effect for Light   However, at low speeds (v<<c, where v is the relative velocity between source and detector) the equations reduce to the classical form: f’ = f (1 ± v/c)  v/c =  /  c, the speed of light in vacuum, is constant (3 X 10 8 m/s)

20 Spectral Line Shifts  When we observe a spectrum of a object, we compare the observed wavelengths to standard ones   Find how the wavelength has shifted (  and thus find u   This is called a red shift  For objects moving towards us the spectral lines move to shorter wavelengths  This is a blue shift

21 Red Shifted Spectrum

22 Expansion of the Universe  In the early 20th century, astronomers discovered that all distant galaxies are red shifted  All galaxies are moving away from all others   In the past, everything in the universe must have been much closer together 

23 Next Time  Read: 18.1-18.6  Homework: Ch 17, P: 52, Ch 18, P: 4, 9

24 Summary: Sound Waves  Sound waves are longitudinal or pressure waves  The medium oscillates in the direction of travel  The speed of sound depends on the density and the bulk modulus (compressibility ) of the medium: v = (B/  ) ½

25 Summary: Wave Equations  The equations for the amplitude and pressure of a sound wave are: s = s m cos (kx-  t)  p =  p m sin (kx-  t)  p m = (v  ) s m  Waves from two sources will interfere based on the path length difference between the sources and detector  L = m (fully constructive)  L = (m+½) (fully destructive)

26 Summary: Intensity and Music  The intensity of sound falls off with a inverse square law: I = P s /4  r 2 I =½  v  2 s m 2  The sound level is:  = (10 dB) log (I 0 /I)  Harmonic frequencies of a pipe f = nv/2L (open at 2 ends) f = nv/4L (open at 1 end)  Beat frequency = f beat = f 1 - f 2

27 Summary: Doppler Effect  Relative motion together produces an increase in frequency  Relative motion apart produces a decrease in frequency f’ = f ( v±v D / v±v S )  For light: v = (  ) c


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