Ch. 10,11, 13 Waves. Name some waves Water Sound Light Radio waves (TV) Microwaves (cell phones)...

33
Ch. 10,11, 13 Waves

Transcript of Ch. 10,11, 13 Waves. Name some waves Water Sound Light Radio waves (TV) Microwaves (cell phones)...

Ch. 10,11, 13 Waves

Name some waves

• Water

• Sound

• Light

• Radio waves (TV)

• Microwaves (cell phones)

• X-rays

• Ultrasound

• Earthquakes! (seismic waves)

Definition

• Wave: repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space.

• How does it transfer energy?

• By making things MOVE

Mechanical Waves

• Mechanical Waves: travel through a medium - sound waves, water waves

• Medium: Solid, liquid or gas

Light doesn’t need a medium

Sound waves DO

Types of Mechanical Waves

• Transverse: side to side motion 90º to the direction of wave travel; ocean, seismic s-waves

• Compressional: back and forth in the direction of wave motion; sound waves, seismic p-waves

Other mechanical waves

• Water waves: combination transverse and compressional

• Seismic waves: earthquakes

s-waves = transverse

p-waves = compressional

Wave Properties - Transverse

• Wavelength: distance between 2 crests

Wavelength λ

Amplitude (at crest)

Trough

Wave Properties – CompressionalWavelength: distance between 2 compressions

Comparison

Compressional and Transverse

Transverse Wave

Compressional Wave

Water Wave

Watch the blue particle

Wave Characteristics

• Frequency- f: # of waves that pass a point per second.

• Unit = Hertz (Hz) = 1 / second

• Higher frequency = shorter wavelengths

• Period-T: Amount of time it takes for one complete wave to pass a point

• Unit = seconds

• T = 1/f

Amplitude and Energy

• Amplitude = height of crest or depth of trough OR

Amplitude = density of the compression • Greater amplitude = greater energy • Ever been knocked down by a BIG wave

at the beach?• Two waves with equal frequency and

wavelength – the larger amplitude wave has the greater energy.

Wave parts

• Transverse parts• Crest – top of the

wave (or a toothpaste)

• Trough bottom of the wave

• Wavelength- space between two crests or troughs

• Compression parts• Rarefaction- less

dense area• Compression- more

dense area• Wavelength- space

between compressions or refractions

Wave speed

• Different waves have different speeds

• Light is faster than sound waves

• Baseball stadium cheap seats: See the ball hit before you hear it

Wave Speed

• Sound moves faster in solids/liquids than air

• Light waves move more slowly in liquids

Wave Speed

• Calculating wave speed:

v = f∙λ

where

v = wave speed

λ = wavelength

f = frequency

Example

• λ = 4 m, f = 2 Hz, v = ?

v = f ∙ λ

= 4 m ∙ 2 Hz

= 8 m/s v

f λ

Example

• v = 14 m/s, f = 2 Hz, λ = ?

v = f ∙ λ

14 = 2 Hz x λ

14 / 2 = λ

λ = 7 m

v

f λ

Behavior of Waves

• Reflection: when a wave hits an object and bounces off

• Examples:

echos = sound waves

image in mirror = light waves

Law of Reflection

• Angle of incidence = Angle of reflection

Refraction

• The bending of a wave caused by a change in it’s speed as it moves from one medium to another

Air

Water

Example

• Standing in pool, legs look shorter

• Look at object at bottom of bathtub and try to grab it

Refraction

Diffraction

• Diffraction: occurs when an object causes a wave to change direction and bend around it

• Look closely at a shadow – transition area between light and dark

• Shine light through thin slit – see diffraction and interference

Diffraction

Interference

• when two or more waves overlap and combine to form a new wave

• Constructive: add to each other

• Destructive: subtract or cancel each other

Constructive Interference

Standing Waves

• wave pattern that forms when waves of equal wavelength and amplitude but opposite directions continuously interfere

• Nodes: zero amplitude

• Examples: musical instruments – strings, woodwinds, etc.

Standing Waves

Resonance

• when an object vibrates at it’s natural frequency.

• Example: ringing bell, tubular chimes, tuning fork

• Badly balanced tires on a car – resonance at certain speeds.

• http://www.archive.org/details/SF121