Top Banner
Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound Speed of Sound Human hearing Doppler effect Seeing with sound
21

Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound Speed of Sound Human hearing Doppler effect Seeing with sound.

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Hugo Montgomery
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound

II. The Nature of Sound Speed of Sound Human hearing Doppler effect Seeing with sound

Page 2: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

What makes Sound?

1. Vibration: back and forth motion

a.There can not be sound if there is not any vibration

b.Most vibrations are too fast for you to see.

c.Vibrations require energy—sound is a form of energy.

Page 3: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

How does Sound Travel?

2. When something vibrates molecules in the air crowd together, then spread apart, causing sound waves to travel away from the vibrating object

Page 4: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

A. Speed of Sound

344 m/s in air at 20°CDepends on:

Type of medium• travels better through liquids and solids• can’t travel through a vacuum

Temperature of medium• travels faster at higher temps

Page 5: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Sound Reflection and Absorption

A. Reflected sound is called an echo.1. The vibrations are reflecting

back to you.B. Soft, air-filled objects absorb sound.

1. When sound is absorbed, you do not hear it because it is not reflected back to you.

Page 6: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

B. Human Hearing

sound wave

vibrates ear drum

amplified by bones

converted to nerve impulses in cochlea

Page 7: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

How do you hear sound? 1. Sound causes your eardrum to vibrate. The eardrum vibrates differently for each sound.

2. The bones of your ear begin to vibrate, beginning with the hammer, moves to the anvil, and finally the stirrup.

3. The sound energy passes to the inner ear. This causes the fluid in the cochlea to move.

4. The nerves then carry the message to the brain.

5. Your brain then tells you what the sound is.

Page 8: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeTriGTENoc

Once upon the time earhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=UQV3ulHAPZM

Page 9: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Pitch

1. Pitch: how high or low a sound isa. The higher the pitch the more “squeezed”

together the waves are

b. The higher the pitch the higher the frequency

c. The lower the pitch the lower the frequency

Page 10: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

B. Human Hearing

Pitchhuman range:

20 - 20,000 Hzultrasonic waves

subsonic waves

Page 11: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

B. Human Hearing

Intensityvolume of sound (how loud, how soft)depends on energy (amplitude) of sound

wavemeasured in decibels (dB)

Page 12: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

B. Human Hearing

7080

100110

120

40

1810

0

DECIBEL SCALE

Page 13: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

C. Doppler Effect

Doppler Effectchange in wave frequency

caused by a moving wave source

moving toward you - pitch sounds higher

moving away from you - pitch sounds lower

Page 14: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Doppler effecthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=h4OnBYrbCjY

Page 15: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

C. Doppler Effect

Stationary source Moving source Supersonic source

same frequency in all directions

waves combine to produce a shock wave

called a sonic boom

higher frequency

lower frequency

Page 16: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

D. Seeing with Sound

Ultrasonic waves - above 20,000 Hz

Medical Imaging SONAR“Sound Navigation Ranging”

Page 17: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

2. Making Sound All sounds are made by vibrations. Humans make sound waves by using

their voice. The human voice is also made by

vibrations. The source of sound in humans is the

vocal cords. Vocal cords — 2 thin, elastic, bands of

tissue that vibrate to produce sound.

Page 18: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

The 5 most annoying soundshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=QakcwQHzPoYThe best sound in the worldhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=oiYmkDSWFFw

Page 19: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Can silence actually existhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=mXVGIb3bzHI

Why You Hate the Sound of Your Own Voicehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=N970lhPK1hY

Page 20: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

How do the vocal cords produce sound?1. Air from the lungs flows through the windpipe

and into the voice box (where the vocal cords are).

2. Then the air pushes the vocal cords apart making them vibrate.

3. The vibrations create a series of sound waves that exit through your mouth.

4. The change of shape of the vocal cords changes the sound and its pitch.

5. If you can’t talk because of a cold or laryngitis, it is because your vocal cords are swollen and inflamed.

Page 21: Ch. 18 - Waves & Sound II. The Nature of Sound  Speed of Sound  Human hearing  Doppler effect  Seeing with sound.

Communication tools that use sound

Voice – allows you to communicate with others.

Morse Code – code for numbers and letters using sound

Sonar – a device that sends sound waves through water to measure or find something.

Animal soundsMusical instruments