1 / 20

CH 10, 11 & 12

CH 10, 11 & 12. Waves. The Nature of Waves. Rhythmic disturbances that carry E through matter or space Water waves transfer E through water Earthquakes transfer E with shock waves through the Earth Water and the Earth are the MEDIUM —material through which the waves transfers E

Télécharger la présentation

CH 10, 11 & 12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CH 10, 11 & 12 Waves

  2. The Nature of Waves • Rhythmic disturbances that carry E through matter or space • Water waves transfer E through water • Earthquakes transfer E with shock waves through the Earth • Water and the Earth are the MEDIUM—material through which the waves transfers E • Medium can be liquid, solid, gas or combination of these • Some waves do not need a medium; radio and light waves can travel through the emptiness of space

  3. Types of waves • Transversewaves—the medium moves at right angles to the direction the wave travels • In a water wave the water moves up and down, while the wave moves horizontally • Compression waves—the matter vibrates in the same direction as the wave travels • Sound waves are compression waves—they need a medium to travel---that is why you cannot hear sound in space

  4. Transverse waves • Crest are the highest points • Troughs are the lowest • Wavelength (λ) is the distance between 2 identical points on adjacent waves—doesn’t have to be crest to crest or trough to trough • Amplitude is the distance from the rest position of the medium to the crest or trough • Larger amplitude—larger amount of E • Tsunamis carry ENORMOUS amounts of E

  5. Frequency (f) is the number of crests that pass a certain place each second • Measured in Hertz (Hz) waves per second • As frequency goes up the wavelength becomes shorter (closer together) • Wave velocity= λ x f • m/s = m x Hz • A wave in a wave pool has a frequency of .60 Hz and a wavelength of 3.2 m. Calculate its velocity.

  6. Whiteboards! • You have a long rope and you are making waves by shaking it up and down. What is the wave’s velocity if the wavelength is 1.2 m and the frequency is 4.5 Hz? • A tsunami wave is 13.0 m in length, and has a frequency of 200.0 Hz. Calculate the speed of the wave. • Another wave is traveling at 25.6 m/s with a wavelength of .2 m. Calculate its frequency. • Yet another wave is traveling at 122.0 m/s with a frequency of 56.0 Hz. What is the wave’s wavelenth?

  7. Compression waves • The area that is close together is the compression • Less dense area is the rarefaction • The matter does not move with the wave—only the E moves forward • EX Every time you hear a sound, you don’t feel a puff of air along with it • Wavelength (λ) = 1 compression and 1 rarefaction • Frequency is the # of compressions that pass a place each second • Amplitude is the amount of the compress—depends on the E of the wave—more E, tighter compression

  8. Sound waves • When you speak your vocal cords produce compression waves that travel through the air causing compressions and rarefactions among the particles in the air • Speed of sound waves depends on the medium and its Temp • Air is the most common, but liquids and solids are better—WHY? • Sound travels faster at warmer Temps—WHY? 20°C: 344m/s and at 0°C: 332m/s Humid better than dry conditions—WHY?

  9. Seismic Waves • Carry E outward like a pebble hitting the water—move out from the focus in all directions • Epicenter is point on the Earth’s surface directly above the focus • They can travel through the Earth and on the surface • Seismic waves from the same earthquake are recorded all over the world using a seismograph • Richter scale is a numerical description of the size of a seismic wave; an increase of 1 on the scale represents a 10x increase in the size of the waves • EX a tremor of 2 on the scale has 10x larger waves than a 1; a 3 has 100x bigger waves than a 1

  10. Earthquakes produce 3 types of waves: • Primary waves (p)– cause matter to stretch and compress –they are the fastest • Secondary waves (s)—slower and they move matter from side to side like horizontal transverse waves • Surface waves—seismic waves that cause a rolling motion in the rock and soil, like vertical transverse waves

  11. Faults • Strength of an earthquake depends on how much E has built up along the fault • 3 types: Normal: rocks above fault line move down • Reverse: rocks move up and over the rocks on the other side—mts are formed this way • Strike-slip: rocks on both sides of the fault slide past each other—San Andreas fault is this type—parts of CA are moving north to Alaska!

  12. Electromagnetic Spectrum

  13. EM waves • Transverse waves produced by the motion of electrically charged particles • They do not require a medium to transfer E • They travel through empty space (vacuum) at 300,000 km/s or 300,000,000m/s! • Travel slower through any type of matter but still much faster than sound waves

  14. All EM waves travel at the same speed in each medium, but their frequencies and λ differ • The shorter the λ, the higher the frequency • Classified from low freq (long λ) radio waves to high freq (short λ) gamma rays • Draw the EM spectrum in your notes from pg 360 if you don’t have these notes

  15. Particle Theory (1905) • Radiation not only carries E but also has momentum which is particle-like behavior • Einstein said that light is composed of tiny mass-less bundles of radiation called photons • Photons with high E can damage matter, including us!

  16. Types of EM Waves • Radio waves: low freq, very long λ, low photon E • Also used in TV, cell phones, cordless phones: sound is turned into transverse waves (electric currents) that represent voice patterns and pitch • Microwaves have the highest freq of all radio waves • Used in communications and cooking • They pass right through paper, plastic and glass w/o heating them (food heats up causing the container to heat up)

  17. EM waves cont. • Infrared Radiation (IR) is heat; most from the sun, but warm objects give off more IR than cooler objects • Dr’s can measure the amount of IR given off as a diagnostic tool: tumors give off more heat than surrounding tissue; called thermograms • Also used in military for night vision and heat seeking missiles

  18. Visible Radiation • We know this part of the spectrum by the name : LIGHT • R—red • O—orange • Y—yellow • G—green • B—blue • I—indigo • V—violet • ROYGBIV • Red has the longest λ, violet the shortest • Light is used in photosynthesis

  19. Ultraviolet Radiation • Higher freq, shorter λthan visible light • Higher photon E with more penetrating power • UV is necessary for vitamin D production in skin cells BUT prolonged and frequent exposure leads to skin cancer • Ozone (O3) layer protects us, but continued use of CFC’s is destroying this layer (go to pg 364 and draw the diagram in your notes)

  20. Deadliest Rays! • X-Rays were discovered by German physicist Wilhem Roentgen in 1895 • He couldn’t explain the mysterious rays so he called them “x-rays” • They are absorbed by dense material (bone) but pass through skin and muscles • Gamma rays have the highest freq and the shortest λ, making them the most penetrating of all EM waves—can penetrate through several cm of lead! • Used to kill cancer cells/tumors

More Related