1 / 12

Waves

Waves. Chapter 15 Pg 454-458 SPI 0707.11.6 & SPI 0707.Inq.4. Learning Objectives. Explain the relationship between waves, energy, and matter Describe the difference between transverse waves and compression waves. New Vocabulary. Wave Vibration Transverse wave Crest Trough

macon
Télécharger la présentation

Waves

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. Waves Chapter 15 Pg 454-458 SPI 0707.11.6 & SPI 0707.Inq.4

  2. Learning Objectives • Explain the relationship between waves, energy, and matter • Describe the difference between transverse waves and compression waves

  3. New Vocabulary • Wave • Vibration • Transverse wave • Crest • Trough • Compressional wave (Longitudinal wave) • Electromagnetic wave

  4. What is a wave? • A wave is a disturbance that transfers energy from one place to another without transferring matter • If you throw a rock into a body of water, waves move out from where the rock entered the water • Energy from the splash causes the water to move up and down as the wave passes (disturbance) • Waves transmit energy and not matter • Waves travel through mediums – the materials disturbed by a wave

  5. Mechanical Waves • In a water wave, water molecules transfer energy as the molecules exert forces on each other • The types of waves that can travel only through matter (mediums) are called mechanical waves • Mechanical waves are produced by something that is vibrating • A vibration is a repeating back and forth motion

  6. Transverse Waves • A wave that makes the matter in a medium move at right angles to the direction the wave moves is a transverse wave • On a transverse wave the high points (peaks) are crests and the low points (valleys) are troughs • Example: shaking a rope up and down • The up and down motion of the rope produces a transverse wave that travels from the hand to the doorknob • Rope moves vertically up and down, while the wave travels horizontally • Motion is at right angles (perpendicular) to the motion of the wave

  7. Transverse Waves

  8. Compression Waves • Also known as a longitudinal wave • Matter in a medium moves back and forth along the same direction that the wave travels • As a compression wave travels along a spring, the coils of the spring move back and forth • After the wave passes, the coils are in the same place they were before the wave reached them • Only energy is transferred as the wave moves along • Example: a spring or a slinky

  9. Parts of Compression Waves • The part of the compression wave where particles are pushed together are called a compression • Parts where the wave particles are spread out are called rarefactions

  10. Sound Waves • Sound waves are a type of compression wave • Sound waves are made by something in the air that is vibrating • Sound waves require a medium in order to transfer energy (Air, water, or a solid object) • Figure 5, pg 457 • The stretched-out part of a longitudinal wave is similar to the trough of a transverse wave

  11. Electromagnetic Waves • Waves that travel through space where there is no matter are electromagnetic waves • Examples: radio waves, infrared waves, visible light waves, ultraviolet waves, x-rays, gamma rays • The sun emits electromagnetic waves that travel through space to Earth • These waves produce radiant energy • Most of this radiant energy is in the form of infrared and visible light waves • These waves make us feel warm in sunlight and light waves enable us to see

  12. Assess What You’ve Learned • Describe the movement of a floating object on a pond when struck by a wave • Explain why a sound wave can’t travel from a satellite to Earth • Compare and contrast a transverse wave and a compression wave. How are they similar/different? • Compare and contrast a mechanical and an electromagnetic wave.

More Related