1 / 17

WAVES 

Animations courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University. WAVES .  A method of energy transfer without the mass movement of particles.  Disturbances that travel through a medium or space.  Energy is transferred without the physical net transfer of matter.

rudolf
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. Animations courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University WAVES  A method of energy transfer without the mass movement of particles.  Disturbances that travel through a medium or space

  2.  Energy is transferred without the physical net transfer of matter. There are two types of waves: 1) Mechanical Wave-- requires a material medium to travel through SOUND

  3. 2) Electromagnetic Waves-- May travel through space (a vacuum) light, X-Rays, gamma rays Mechanical waves are categorized by how they travel through the medium: Transverse Waves the displacement of the particles of the medium is perpendicular to the propagation of the wave. ?

  4. Breakers are waves that have “fallen over” because the medium is too shallow!

  5. Water waves (not breakers) are examples of transverse mechanical waves. Longitudinal Waves displacement of the particles of the medium is parallel to the propagation of the wave. Ex: Sound wave

  6. Longitudinal Wave Characteristics Compression Rarefaction Reubens tube demo  2  Wavelength () the distance from one point in phase to the next point in phase. The length of one complete cycle.

  7. Transverse Wave Characteristics amplitude Crest  Trough 

  8. Period (T)the time it takes to complete a single cycle- the time for one single wavelength. frequency (f) the number of cycles per second • measured in Hertz (Hz): cycles per second or waves per second f = 1/T T = 1/f Wave speed (v)  how fast the wave travels units: Hz(m) = m/s v = f

  9. A tuning fork that is marked 262 Hz is struck and produces wavelengths that are measured in a lab to be 1.28 m. What is the speed of sound in this lab? v = f  f = 262 Hz = (262 Hz)(1.28 m)  = 1.28 m v = ? = 335 m/s What would the wavelength of a 128 Hz tuning fork be in the same lab? = (335 m/s) 128 Hz  = v/f = 2.62 m

  10. Two fishing boats are positioned so that one is atop a crest while the other is at the bottom of an adjacent trough. The boats oscillate and pass each other 22 times in a minute. The boats are exactly 6.00 m apart when they pass each other. What is the speed of the waves that are oscillating the boats? v = f  f = 11waves 60 s = (.183 Hz)(12.0 m) = 2.20 m/s f = .183 Hz  = 2(6.00 m) = 12.0 m

  11. Wave Interactions Light travels in a straight line, very un-wave like: Move one of the boards and…

  12. Reflection Bouncing of a wave off of a boundary: Hard Boundary Soft Boundary

  13. Refraction: Bending of waves as they change speed passing from one medium to another:

  14. Diffraction: Waves spread through an opening--

  15. Interference: When waves interact in such a way as to reinforce/cancel each others’ effects:

  16. Superposition: the effects of waves on the medium they travel through: Superposition Examples Impedance: the resistance of the medium to passing the wave energy: Impedance Examples Damping: Loss of wave energy traveling through a medium

  17. Wave Interactions Rectilinear Propagation loss of energy Reflection spreading wave “friction” Diffraction straight line Refraction bouncing Interference bending Impedance effects of waves Damping waves affect medium Superposition

More Related