1 / 26

Welcome back to Physics 215

Welcome back to Physics 215. Today’s agenda: Standing waves and normal modes Sound waves Brief review for final Course evaluations. Current homework assignment. HW12: Knight Textbook Ch. 14: 48, 58, 76 Knight Textbook Ch. 20: 62 exam-style problem – print out from website

stamos
Télécharger la présentation

Welcome back to Physics 215

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. Welcome back to Physics 215 Today’s agenda: • Standing waves and normal modes • Sound waves • Brief review for final • Course evaluations

  2. Current homework assignment • HW12: • Knight Textbook Ch. 14: 48, 58, 76 • Knight Textbook Ch. 20: 62 • exam-style problem – print out from website • due Friday, Dec. 10th in recitation

  3. Final Exam: Thursday (Dec .16), 12:45PM • Exam will be 2 hours long • In Room 208 (here!) • Cumulative! • Material covered: • Textbook chapters 1-15, 20 • Lectures -- all (slides online) • Workshop Activities -- all • Homework assignments -- all (select solutions online) • Exams 1, 2 & 3 (solutions online) • As with Exams 1, 2 & 3, Final is closed book, but you may bring calculator and onehandwritten 8.5” x 11” sheet of notes -- this may be a different sheet from Exams 1, 2 & 3. • Practice versions of Final Exam posted online

  4. Sinusoidal Waves [Can also use sine in the definition since cos(q) = sin(q-p/2)] Angular frequency Amplitude Angular wave number Initial phase Speed of sinusoidal wave:

  5. Power in a wave • Consider energy of SHM E = (1/2)kA2 = (1/2)mw2A2 • What is m? • Total mass of excited oscillators in time T is Tvm • Also need power = energy per unit time delivered by wave E/T = P = (1/2)vmw2A2

  6. Reflection of waves Fixed end Free end • Reflection – reversal of wave velocity Pulse not inverted f(x - vt) a+ f(x + vt) Pulse inverted f(x - vt) a– f(x + vt)

  7. Interference • When two waves propagate through same region – combine to give some new wave motion • interfere • Resultant wave motion is simply sum of individual wave motions (superposition)

  8. Resultant wave Two different waves Superposition of waves • Waves add up algebraically y(x,t) = y1(x,t) + y2(x,t) As a consequence, waves can pass through each other without being altered

  9. Standing Waves • Consider wave on rubber hose (demo) • If I drive system with just right frequency • hose exhibits standing wave pattern • some parts of hose never move, others oscillate always maximally. Motion of different parts of medium in phase • no energy transport

  10. Mathematics of standing waves y(x, t)= Acos(wt - kx) - Acos(wt + kx) = 2Asin(wt)sin(kx) Possible values of k ? If string of length L is clamped at both ends, need yyL . Therefore, need kL = p,2p,3p,... 14243 Amplitude oscillating with time 123 Wave that does not move (v=0)

  11. antinodes Normal Modes y(x, t)= 2Asin(wt)sin(kx) /2 = L nodes  = L /2 = L 0 L

  12. A string is clamped at both ends and plucked so that it vibrates in a standing wave mode between positions a and b. Take upward motion of the string to correspond to positive velocities. When the string is in position c, the instantaneous velocity of points along the string: is zero everywhere is positive everywhere is negative everywhere depends on location

  13. A string is clamped at both ends and plucked so that it vibrates in a standing wave mode between positions a and b. Take upward motion of the string to correspond to positive velocities. When the string is in position b, the instantaneous velocity of points along the string: is zero everywhere is positive everywhere is negative everywhere depends on location

  14. Molecule Direction of velocity of the sound wave Sound Waves • Longitudinal oscillation of gas (or liquid) molecules • As a consequence, gas pressure oscillates • Velocity of sound depends on the medium vsound in air ≈ 330 m/s • We hear frequency of the wave (f) as a pitch of the sound -- high pitch = high frequency (short wavelength)

  15. Intensity • Intensity -- average power transported per unit area • Decibel scale I0 = threshold of hearing • threshold of pain 120 dB • elevated train 90 dB • quiet automobile 50 dB • average whisper 20 dB • threshold of hearing 0 dB

  16. Kinematics -1D • Know: definitions/meaning instantaneous velocity and acceleration • Graphical interpretation: slope of x(t) and v(t) curves • Area under v(t) curve  x, etc. • Constant acceleration formulae: v = v0 + at x = x0 + v0t + (1/2)at2 etc.

  17. Kinematics – 2D • Velocity tangent to path • Acceleration – 2 components – radial v2/r (centripetal) and tangential – rate of change of speed • Know about adding/subtracting vectors graphically and in component form

  18. Forces • Free body diagrams, labeling - FAB • Types: normal N, tension T (massless string), friction Fk = mk N, weight W,... • Newton’s laws • Fnet = ma, F12 = -F21 • Internal/external forces

  19. Work, momentum, etc. • F.Dx – scalar product of vectors • W-KE theorem: net work done on body equals change in K = (1/2)mv2 • Impulse I = FDt  net impulse on body gives change in momentum p = mv • Conservation of momentum (collisions) and conservation (or not) of mechanical energy -- elastic vs. inelastic

  20. Rotational Dynamics • Center of mass • equilibrium: Fnet = 0, tnet = 0 (torque). • |t|=r||F|sin(q) magnitude. Direction along axis of rotation (fixed) (clockwise or anticlockwise) • Angular velocity w and acceleration a • Moment of inertia: Ia = t

  21. More rotational dynamics • Angular momentum L = Iw • Angular (rotational) kinetic energy K = (1/2)Iw2 for body rotating about fixed axis • Rolling without slipping – relation between linear and rotational acceleration a = Ra

  22. Gravitation Inverse square law: F = Gm1m2/r2 F12 m1 r m2

  23. Fluid Mechanics • Pressure vs. depth: P = P0 + gh • Archimedes principle • Buoyant force = weight of displaced fluid

  24. Periodic Motion, Waves • Defining equation for SHM a = -w2x with w2 = k/m for spring • Solutions: x = Acos(wt+f). Energy E = (1/2)kx2 + (1/2)mv2 conserved. • Amplitude, frequency, wavelength, angular frequency, wavenumber for traveling wave. Standing waves. Power in wave. Wave speed for stretched wire. Sound waves.

  25. Wave formulae P = (1/2)v2A2

  26. Reading assignment • Prepare for final exam • Have a great semester break!

More Related