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Wave - III
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Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Mar 30, 2015

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Page 1: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Wave - III

Page 2: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Sound Resonances

Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end.

L

vvfL

4or

4

1

111

L

vnfn 4

12

At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open end, and a displacement node at the closed end.

The longest wavelength to satisfy this condition is

Fundamental resonant frequency

1311

2 54

5 and 3

4

3f

L

vff

L

vf

Harmonics:

Page 3: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Pipe open at both ends: displacement antinodes at both ends. open end closed at the other end.

Pipe closed at both ends: displacement nodes at both ends.

In both cases:

12nf

L

vnfn

The same expression as in string with both ends fixed.

Page 4: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Beats

Two sound waves with different but close frequencies give rise to BEATS

s1 x,t sm cos1tConsider

s2 x,t sm cos2t1 2

s s1 s2 2sm cos t cost

cos cos 2cos1

2 cos

1

2

1

21 2 Very

small

1

21 2 ≈1≈2

Page 5: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

s 2sm cos t cost

On top of the almost same frequency, the amplitude takes maximum twice in a cycle: cos’t = 1 and -1: Beats

1

21 2

Beat frequency fbeat: fbeat f1 f2

Page 6: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

The Doppler Effect

The Doppler Effect: the frequency change related to the motions of the source or/and detector

In the following, the speed is measured with respect to the air, through which the sound wave travels

Page 7: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Detector Moving, Source Stationary

f vt

t

v

The detector stationary:

Distance the sound

travels in time t

Divided by to get the number of periods in time t

Periods in unit time: frequency

The detector moving toward the source: more periods reaches detector. Equivalently:

f vt vDt

t

v vD

Page 8: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

f v vD

vf

vD is the SPEED, always positive

The detector moving toward the source:

In general:

f v vD

vf

+ : toward S-: away from S

vf

Dv v

f

Page 9: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Source Moving, Detector Stationary

vT

The source stationary:

Distance between two wavefronts period T apart

f v

The source moving toward the detector : waves are squeezed. Equivalently:

vT vST f v

f

f

Page 10: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

vT vT vST

f v

v vS f vS is the SPEED, always positive

The source moving toward the detector :

In general:

f

v

v vS f-: toward D +: away fromD

f

f

Page 11: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

In General

f

v vD v vS f

+: away from D -: toward D

+ : toward S -: away from S

All speeds are measured with respect to the medium of propagation: the air

Page 12: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

At Low Speed

f f 1u

v

u vS vDRelative speed:

+ : toward each other

-: away from each other

Page 13: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

Supersonic Speed

f v

v vS f

The source moving toward the detector :

When vS>v, the equation no longer applicable: Supersonic speed

A Shock Wave is generated: abrupt change of air pressure

The wavefronts form a Mach Cone

Page 14: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

HRW 51E (5th ed.). The water level in a vertical glass tube 1.00 m long can be adjusted to any position in the tube. A tuning fork vibrating at 686 Hz is held just over the open top end of the tube. At what positions of the water level will there be a resonance?

Let L be the length of the air column. Then the condition for resonance is:

f

vnL

L

vnf nn 4

12or

412

mnLn 8

7,

8

5,

8

3,

8

1

6864

34312

mLn 125.0,375.0,625.0,875.00.1Lwater

L

vnfn 4

12

Page 15: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

HRW 61E (5th ed.). A tuning fork of unknown frequency makes three beats per second with a standard fork of frequency 384 Hz. The beat frequency decreases when a small piece of wax in put on a prong of the first fork. What is the frequency of this fork?

fbeat = 3 Hz f1 = 381 or 387 Hz

Mass increases f1 decreases

Therefore, f1 = 387 Hz

fbeat f1 f2

f n

2L

Resonant frequency

fbeat decreases f1 becomes closer to 384 Hz

Page 16: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

HRW 68E (5th ed.). The 16,000 Hz whine of the turbines in the jet engines of an aircraft moving with speed 200 m/s is heard at what frequency by the pilot of a second aircraft trying to overtake the first at a speed of 250 m/s?

f

v vD v vS f

The detector moves toward the source: take the plus sign for vD.

The source moves away from the detector : take the plus sign for vS.

f v vD v vS

f 343 m/s + 250 m/s

343 m/s + 200 m/s17,500 Hz

Page 17: Wave - III Sound Resonances Consider a pipe of length L, open at one end, closed at the other end. At resonance, a displacement antinode at the open.

HRW 80P (5th ed.). A person on a railroad car blows a trumpet note at 440 Hz. The car is moving toward a wall at 20.0 m/s. Calculate (a) the frequency of the sound as received at the wall and (b) the frequency of the reflected sound arriving back at the source.

Hz 467=Hz) 440(m/s 20.0 - m/s 343

m/s 343

f

vv

vf

S

(a) The source moving toward the detector :

(b) The person (detector) moves toward the source at the wall withf’ = 467 Hz:

Hz 494=Hz) 467( m/s 343

m/s 20.0+m/s 343

f

v

vvf D

r