Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses...

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Waves Wave characteristics

Transcript of Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses...

Page 1: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

WavesWave characteristics

Page 2: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Travelling Waves

There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in

the physical world.

Page 3: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Transverse In these waves the source that

produces the wave oscillates at right angles to the direction of travel of the wave

It means that the particles of the medium through which the wave travels also oscillates at right angle to the direction of travel of the wave.

Page 4: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Direction of travelof the wave

Direction of oscillationof the particles

Transverse Wave

Page 5: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Longitudinal In these waves the source that

produces the wave oscillates in the same direction as the direction of travel of the wave

It means that the particle of the medium through which the wave travels also oscillates in the same direction as the direction of travel of the wave.

Page 6: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Longitudinal Wave

Direction of travelof the wave

Direction of oscillationsof the particles

Page 7: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Transverse Waves

Page 8: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Longitudinal Waves

Page 9: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

What is a Wave?

A wave is a means by which energy is transferred between two points in a medium without any net transfer of the medium itself.

Page 10: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

The Medium

The substance or object in which the wave is travelling.

When a wave travels in a medium parts of the medium do not end up at different places.

The energy of the source of the wave is carried to different parts of the medium by the wave.

Page 11: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Water waves however, can be a bit disconcerting;

Waves at sea do not transport water but the tides do.

Similarly, a wave on a lake does not transport water but water can actually be blown along by the wind.

Page 12: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Displacement

(d) is the distance that any particle is away from its equilibrium position at any given time.

Measured in meters

Page 13: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Amplitude

(A, a) This is the maximum displacement of a particle from its equilibrium position.

(It is also equal to the maximum displacement of the source that produces the wave).

Normally measured in meters

Page 14: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Period

(T) This is the time that it takes a particle to make one complete oscillation.

(It also equals the time for the source of the wave to make one complete oscillation).

Measured in seconds

Page 15: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Frequency

(f) This is the number of oscillations made per second by a particle.

(It is also equal to the number of oscillations made per second by the source of the wave)

The SI unit of frequency is the hertz -Hz. (1 Hz is 1 oscillation per second)

So, f = 1/T

Page 16: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Wavelength

() This is the distance along the medium between two successive particles that have the same displacement and the same phase of motion.

Ex. Distance between two consecutive wave crests.

Measured in meters

Page 17: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Wave Speed

(v, c) This is the speed with which energy is carried in the medium by the wave.

Measured in m/s A very important fact is that wave

speed depends only on the nature and properties of the medium.

Page 18: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Crest

This is a term coined from water waves and refers to the points at the maximum height of the wave.

Page 19: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Trough

A term coined from water waves referring to the points at the lowest part of the wave.

Page 20: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Wavelength again!

Wavelength will therefore be equal to the distance between successive crests and/or successive troughs.

Page 21: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Compression

This is a term used in connection with longitudinal wave and refers to the region where the particles of the medium are "bunched up".

High density High pressure

Page 22: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Rarefaction

A term used in connection with longitudinal waves referring to the regions where the particles are "stretched out".

Low density Low pressure

Page 23: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Longitudinal Waves The wavelength will be equal to the

distance between successive points of maximum compression and/or successive points of maximum rarefaction.

The compression is the region in which the molecules of the air are pushed together.

The rarefaction is the region where the molecules move apart.

Page 24: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

rarefactions

wavelength

Page 25: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Sound Waves

A longitudinal wave in a slinky spring is analogous to a sound wave in which each turn of the spring represents an air molecule.

Page 26: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Interpreting Graphs - 1

displacement

distance

crest

trough

amplitude crestwavelength

amplitude

wavelength

Page 27: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Interpreting Graphs - 2

displacement

time

amplitudeperiod

period

Page 28: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Deriving v = f Imagine a wave with velocity v Being produced from a source of

frequency f In 1 second the 1st wavefront would

have travelled a distance of f As speed = distance / time v = f / 1 v = f

Page 29: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

2 Important Points

1. The frequency of a wave depends only on the source producing the wave.

It will therefore not change if the wave enters a different medium or the properties of the medium change

Page 30: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

2. The Speed of waves only depends on the nature and the properties of the medium.

Water waves do travel faster in deeper water

Light waves do travel slower in more optically dense material.

Sound waves do travel slower in cold air

Page 31: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

The EM Spectrum Itself

Short Long High fLow f

VISIBLERadioWaves

MicroWaves

Infrared

Gammarays

UltraViolet

Xrays

Page 32: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Frequencies of Regions (Hz)

• Gamma Rays >1021

• X-rays 1017- 1021

• Ultraviolet 1014 - 1017

• Violet 7.5 x 1014 > Visible > Red 4.3 x 1014

• Infrared 1011 -1014

• Microwaves 109 -1011

• Radio and TV < 109

Page 33: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

The Different Regions In the context of wave motion, common

properties of all parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are

all transverse waves all travel at the speed of light in vacuum

(3.0 x 108 m/s) all can travel in a vacuum

Page 34: Waves Wave characteristics. Travelling Waves v There are two types of mechanical waves and pulses that we encounter in the physical world.

Sources of Regions Gamma – certain radioactive material’s nuclei X-rays – by firing an electron stream at a tungsten

metal target in a highly evacuated tube. Ultraviolet – the Sun, ultraviolet lamp Visible – hot bodies Infrared – the Sun (heat), hot bodies Microwaves – Ovens, communication systems Radio and TV – transmitter stations, Azteca TV