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Waves-General
Vocabulary: crest, trough, wavelength, period, frequency, pitch, amplitude, node, anti-node, transverse wave,
longitudinal wave, standing wave, compression, rarefaction, infrasonic, ultrasonic, resonance, harmonics,
Doppler Effect, red shift, shock wave, constructive interference, destructive interference
Period (T) = time for one wave cycle (unit = seconds) T = 1/f
Types of waves: Transverse: water waves, S-waves in earthquakes
Longitudinal: sound waves, P-waves in earthquakes
Law of Superposition: During interference, the amplitudes of 2 or more waves add together
Constructive Interference: crests add to crests, and troughs add to troughs, increasing the amplitude
Destructive Interference: crests add to troughs, decreasing the amplitude
Energy of a wave: amplitude measures the amount of energy in a wave
Standing Waves: created when incident and reflected waves interfere to make stable patterns of constructive
and destructive interference. The higher the frequency, the more nodes will be created (shorter wavelength)
In strings: Nodes must be located at the end points.
In tubes: displacement anti-nodes will be at open ends of the tube, nodes will be at closed ends.
Doppler Effect: the change in frequency caused by moving wave source or an observer moving relative to a
wave source. The frequency of a wave is increased in front of a moving wave source, and decreased behind
the wave source.
Example: The sound of a car engine passing you sounds higher as it approaches you, and lower as it moves
away from you. The actual pitch of the car engine is in between the high and low pitch (you hear this pitch
for the very brief time that the car is right alongside you).
Sound Waves
Sound -- General
• Sound sources are vibrating objects.
• Standing waves create continuous sounds (vibrating tuning fork, wine glass, etc)
• Sound travels away from source.
• Sound waves are longitudinal waves and create a series of compressions and rarefactions (expansions)
• The size and properties of the vibrating object affect the sound produced.
• While sound is a longitudinal wave, it’s often represented as a transverse wave because it’s easier to draw.
• Our perception of sound is related to the sound waves properties: frequency ~ pitch, amplitude ~ loudness,
complexity ~ quality/tone
Frequency and Pitch
• The faster the frequency, the lower the wavelength, the higher the pitch.
• The frequency created by an object depends on that objects composition, density, tension, and length.
• The pitch of a sound can be manipulated using the things listed above. Music is made this way.
• Notes on instruments are created by standing waves in the object producing the sound.
Practice Problems:
2. Draw a spring pulse moving toward a fixed end then draw the reflected pulse as it travels back. (include
direction arrows).
3. Describe what constructive and destructive interference is and include a picture in your explanation.
Constructive Interference:
Destructive Interference:
4. The transverse wave below represents the air pressure of a (longitudinal) sound wave traveling in the air.
Use it to answer the following questions: (in all cases, assume the same medium)
c. Draw a wave that had the same pitch but was softer:
e. Which of the waves that you drew has the longest wavelength (a, b, c, d)? ________
f. Which of the waves you drew would travel the slowest? _______
g. Which of the waves you drew has the highest frequency? _______
6. Explain with a sketch why an ambulance siren sounds higher pitched when approaching you and lower
pitched when moving away from you.
8. Describe three different ways that pitch can be manipulated in a guitar to make music.
9. Guitars and pianos are both stringed instruments. Why do they sound so different?
10. Draw the fundamental and second and third harmonics of a standing wave moving between the endpoints
shown below. Which note will have the lowest pitch? Which 2 notes will be octaves? Label the nodes,
anti-nodes, amplitude and wavelength for the third harmonic.
Fundamental: Second Harmonic:
Third Harmonic:
11. Why do longer objects make lower-pitched notes than short objects?
12. The speed of sound in fresh water at 20oC is 1482 m/sec, while it is 1522 m/sec in seawater at 20oC. Why
do you think it is faster in seawater?
13. Two bottlenose dolphins are carrying on a long distance conversation. If they are 200 km apart, and the
speed of sound in seawater is 1.522 km/sec, how long will it take one dolphin to hear the other?
14. The bottle nose dolphins are communicating at a frequency of 100,000 Hz. What is the wavelength of
these waves in seawater (v = 1522 m/sec)?
15. If a girl is bouncing a ball with a frequency of 2 bounces/second, what is the period of bouncing?
Name: ______________________________ Period:
Waves Extra Practice
1. Label the wave below with the following: Wavelength, Amplitude, Crest, Trough
_ _ 11. If the frequency of a wave was doubled from its original value (in the same medium), the
A. wavelength would be doubled. C. amplitude would decrease.
B. wavelength would be halved D. amplitude would increase.
12. Use the pictures below to draw what would happen at the point of interference.
3) Which has a longer wavelength (in the same medium): red light or x-rays?
4) Which has a lower frequency (in the same medium): ultraviolet light or microwaves?
5) What is fission?