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Standing Waves Time to read Chapter 3 of Berg & Stork

Standing Waves Time to read Chapter 3 of Berg & Stork. String with ends fixed. String is stretched = tension string wants to return to normal length …. String with ends fixed. String is stretched = tension … but it overshoots and keeps oscillating. Different vibration modes. fundamental.

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Standing Waves Time to read Chapter 3 of Berg & Stork

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  1. Standing Waves Time to read Chapter 3 of Berg & Stork

  2. String with ends fixed String is stretched = tension string wants to return to normal length …

  3. String with ends fixed String is stretched = tension … but it overshoots and keeps oscillating

  4. Different vibration modes fundamental 3rd harmonic 2nd harmonic 4th harmonic Animation courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University

  5. Standing waves are a superposition of two counter moving waves Animation courtesy of Dr. Dan Russell, Kettering University

  6. v v T/2 = l/(2v) f = v/l l speed of the wave on the string, NOT the speed of sound

  7. L • 1 = 2 L f1 = v/l1 = v/(2L) • 2 = L f2 = v/l2 = v/L=2 f1 …

  8. If the initial position of the string is one the the vibration modes, only that mode will be “excited” In general, the initial shape of the string will be a superposition of many modes. Each one will be excited and evolve in time separately with their own frequency. Different initial conditions will produce a different timbre. http://www.falstad.com/loadedstring/

  9. Mersenne’s laws length fundamental frequency tension mass per length

  10. In other words … • Frequency is inversely proportional to length • Frequency is proportional to square root of tension • Frequency is inversely proportional to square root of the string density

  11. Vibration modes of membranes two integers

  12. You can also watch it on YouTubehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zkox6niJ1Wc

  13. For a circular membrane

  14. Great visualization (with sound !) of membranes vibration modes http://www.falstad.com/membrane/j2/

  15. Vibration modes of a bottle of beer fundamental mode

  16. http://www.kettering.edu/~drussell/Demos.html

  17. Fourier amplitudes of an empty beer bottle struck at the neck

  18. Resonance force Pushes at the natural frequency of the swing increase the oscillation amplitude

  19. For a resonance to occur the driving force needs to have a frequency very close to one of the natural frequencies of the resonating object. It also helps if that mode has little damping.

  20. Sound can play the role of a periodic force that can excite a particular vibration mode if the frequencies match

  21. Playing one note on the piano (C,E,F,G) makes the C3 “sing”

  22. Sympathetic string is not touched by the player but it resonates with the other strings hardingfele

  23. Resonance curve violin loudspeaker response at a given frequency

  24. Typical loudspeaker response in a room valleys and peaks resulting from interaction with walls, furniture, …

  25. Examples of resonance: • radio receiver (selects one frequency out of many through resonant circuit) • buildings and earthquakes, bridges and wind flutter • child on a swing • voice and musical instruments (formants) • many phenomena in the emission and absorption of light • …

  26. Resonant interaction with Saturn’s moons destabilizes some of the orbits in the ring

  27. Standing sound waves in air tubes This is not a string now, it’s the graph of the pressure x distance

  28. air tubes x strings vstring vsound nodes or antinodes at the ends nodes at the ends

  29. open end closed end pressure displacement

  30. l/4

  31. Example: closed-open tube, N=7

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