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Thursday PS 1-3 Homework Light Sound.

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Presentation on theme: "Thursday PS 1-3 Homework Light Sound."— Presentation transcript:

1 Thursday PS 1-3 Homework Light Sound

2 Homework Pg 478 1) Describe what may happen when ripples on a pond encounter a large rock 2) Explain why you can hear two people talking even after they walk around a corner? 3) Name the conditions required for two waves to interfere constructively

3 Homework P 478 4) Explain why colors appear on a soap bubble
5) Draw a standing wave, and label nodes and antinodes 6) What conditions are required for two waves to interfere completely destructively? (there are 4)

4 Answers Reflection Diffraction, as they pass the corner of hall
Waves must be in same place (meet). Crest meets crest or trough meets trough

5 Answers 4) Two sets of reflected waves from bubble meat, some constructively, others destructively changing the wavelength of light. Different colors result from different wavelengths 5) 6) Waves must match in amplitude, frequency and crest must match up with trough

6 Correction Colors can be formed by either constructive or destructive interference As long as the combined frequency falls within the range of visible light Different frequencies of light produce color

7 Iridescence Also formed as a result of interference between 2 or more waves of light Liquid crystal thermometers Wings of butterflies Tail of a peacock Bird feathers Beetles shell

8 Examples of Iridescence

9 More examples of iridescence

10 SOUND

11 Sound Wave type –Longitudinal Speed of Sound 331m/s @ 0°C to 386 @ 25C
C in water C Speed of sound is effected by temperature, and type of medium

12 Other measurement of sound
Intensity

13 Loudness Depends on the energy in the sound wave
Intensity = rate of energy transmission through a given area of the medium Greater Intensity  Louder sound

14 Measure of Loudness Relative intensity
Compares the intensity of the sound with the intensity of the quietest sound that a person can hear Measured in decibels

15 Decibel scale 0 dB  threshold of hearing 30 dB  whispering
50dB  normal conversation 70dB  vacuum cleaner 90 dB  lawnmower 120 dB  threshold of pain 150 dB  nearby jet airplane

16

17 Pitch Not related to loudness Related to the frequency of wave
The higher the frequency  higher the pitch Humans can hear a range of sound from 20 HZ to 20,000 HZ

18 Sound beyond human range
Lower than 20 Hz  Infrasound Higher than 20,000 Hz  ultrasound Dogs can hear to 46,000 Hz Dolphins can hear to 150,000 Hz

19 Elephant communication
Use infrasound waves between 6-18Hz Few objects can absorb the energy carried by these frequencies Sounds heard across far distances

20 Echo-location Dolphin sends out a series of audible clicks.
They bounce off an object and reflect back to dolphin, received by 2 ears Through experience, dolphin relates time, strength of signal into distance

21 Other animals to use echo-location

22 Musical Instruments Produce sound by vibrating strings, air columns or membranes Changing where you press on a string, The length of the air column changes the frequency, and pitch Standing waves produce the continuous sound, Notes created at certain wavelengths

23 Echos What is needed to create an echo?

24 Place where you hear an echo the most?

25 Example of Ultrasonic sound waves
                                       Example of Ultrasonic sound waves 1 to 15 million Hz Passes through most materials, but reflects at medium boundaries Not harmful like x-rays Used more frequently for other purposes

26 Why use ultrasonic waves?
Focused into more narrow beams Directed more easily

27 SONAR Sound, Navigation, and RAnging
Uses acoustic signals and echo returns to locate objects

28 Sonar

29 Homework Pg 498 Problems 1-5 and #9


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