Post on 14-Dec-2015
Chapter 10: Waves
Unit 3: Energy On the Move
Table of ContentsTable of Contents
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10.3: The Behavior of Waves
10.1: The Nature of Waves
10.2: Wave Properties
What’s in a wave?
• wave is a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space.
• Examples?
10.110.1The Nature of Waves The Nature of Waves
Waves and Energy
• Because it is moving, the falling pebble has energy.
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• As it splashes into the pool, the pebble transfers some of its energy to nearby water molecules, causing them to move.
• What you see is energy traveling in the form of a wave on the surface of the water.
Waves and Matter
• Imagine you’re in a boat on a lake.
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• Approaching waves bump against your boat, but they don’t carry it along with them as they pass.
Waves and Matter
• The waves don’t even carry the water along with them. Only the energy carried by the waves moves forward.
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• All waves have this propertythey carry energy without transporting matter from place to place.
Making Waves
• A wave will travel only as long as it has energy to carry.
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Making Waves • It is the up-and-down motion of your
hand that creates the wave.
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• Anything that moves up and down or back and forth in a rhythmic way is vibrating.
• The vibrating movement of your hand at the end of the rope created the wave. In fact,
-All waves are produced by something that vibrates.
Mechanical Waves
• Medium- matter the waves travel through is called a The medium can be a solid, a liquid, or gas
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Mechanical Waves
• Not all waves need a medium.
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• Light and radio waves, can travel through space. (No Medium)
• mechanical waves- Waves that can travel only through a medium.
• The two types of mechanical waves are transverse waves and compressional waves.
Transverse Waves • transverse wave, Waves move at right
angles to the direction that the wave travels. (Like water waves)
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• For example, a water wave travels horizontally as the water moves vertically up and down.
Compressional Waves
• compressional wave, waves move the same direction that the wave travels.
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• You can model compressional waves with a coiled spring toy.
Compressional Waves 10.110.1The Nature of Waves The Nature of Waves
• Squeeze several coils together at one end of the spring. Then let go of the coils.
Compressional Waves • As the wave moves, it looks as if the whole
spring is moving toward one end.
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• The wave carries energy, but not matter, forward along the spring.
• Compressional waves also are called longitudinal waves.
Sound Waves
• Sound waves are compressional waves.
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• When a noise is made, such as when a locker door slams shut and vibrates, nearby air molecules are pushed together by the vibrations.
Sound Waves
• The air molecules are squeezed together like the coils in a coiled spring toy are when you make a compressional wave with it.
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• The compressions travel through the air to make a wave.
Sound in Other Materials
• Sound waves also can travel through other mediums, such as water and wood.
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• When a sound wave reaches your ear, it causes your eardrum to vibrate.
• Your inner ear then sends signals to your brain, and your brain interprets the signals as sound.
Water Waves 10.110.1
The Nature of Waves The Nature of Waves
• Ocean waves are formed most often by wind blowing across the ocean surface.
• The size of the waves that are formed depend on the wind speed, the distance over which the wind blows, and how long the wind blows.
Seismic Waves 10.110.1
The Nature of Waves The Nature of Waves
• Forces in Earth’s crust can cause regions of the crust to shift, bend, or even break.
• The breaking crust vibrates, creating seismic (SIZE mihk) waves that carry energy outward.
Seismic Waves 10.110.1
The Nature of Waves The Nature of Waves
• Seismic waves are a combination of compressional and transverse waves. They can travel through Earth and along Earth’s surface.
• The more the crust moves during an earthquake, the more energy is released. Click image to view movie
10.110.1Section CheckSection Check
Question 1
What is a wave?
A wave is a repeating movement that transfers energy through matter or space.
Answer
10.110.1Section CheckSection Check
Question 2
Which is carried by a water wave?
A. a boat on the surfaceB. boat anchor submerged 50 mC. energyD. water molecules
10.110.1Section CheckSection Check
Answer
The answer is C. Waves carry energy without transporting matter from place to place.
10.110.1Section CheckSection Check
Question 3
Which type of wave does not need a medium?
A. electromagneticB. mechanicalC. oceanD. sound
10.110.1Section CheckSection Check
Answer
The answer is A. Electromagnetic waves are made by vibrating electric charges and can travel through space where matter is not present.
The Parts of a Wave
• Waves can differ in how much energy they carry and in how fast they travel.
• Waves also have other characteristics that make them different from each other.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
The Parts of a Wave
• crests - Alternating high points
• troughs - Alternating low points
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The Parts of a Wave • Parts of a compressional wave
• Compression- region where the coils are close together.
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The Parts of a Wave
• Rarefaction- region where coils are spread apart
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Wavelength • wavelength is the distance between two of
the same points on a wave
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Wavelength
• The wavelengths of sound waves that you can hear range from a few centimeters for the highest-pitched sounds to about 15 m for the deepest sounds.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
Frequency and Period
• frequency of a wave is the number of wavelengths that pass a fixed point each second.
• transverse waves- number of crests that pass by a point each second.
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• Frequency is expressed in hertz (Hz).
Frequency and Period
• Period- amount of time it takes one wavelength to pass a point.
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Wavelength is Related to Frequency • As frequency increases, wavelength decreases.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
• If you move the rope up, down, and back up in 1 s, the frequency of the wave you generate is 1 Hz.
• Sound travel faster in liquids and solids than they do in gases.
• Light waves travel more slowly in liquid and solids than they do in gases or in empty space.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
• Sound waves faster in a material if the temperature of the material is increased.
Sound and Mediums
Calculating Wave Speed
• You can calculate the speed of a wave represented by v by multiplying its frequency times its wavelength.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
Amplitude and Energy
• Amplitude energy carried by a wave.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
• The greater the wave’s amplitude is, the more energy the wave carries.
Click image to play movie
Amplitude of Compressional Waves
• The closer the coils are in a compression, the farther apart they are in a rarefaction.
10.210.2Wave PropertiesWave Properties
10.210.2Section CheckSection Check
Question 1If a wave has a high point and a low point, is it a compressional or transverse wave?
10.210.2Section CheckSection Check
Transverse waves have alternating high points, called crests, and low points, called troughs.
Answer
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Answer
A wavelength is the distance between one point on a wave and the nearest point just like it.
10.210.2Section CheckSection Check
Question 3
Which of the following refers to the number of wavelengths that pass a fixed point each second?
A. frequencyB. periodC. wavelengthD. wave speed
10.210.2Section CheckSection Check
Answer
The answer is A. Period is a length of time, and wavelength is a distance.
To Be a Wave
• All waves must- Reflect, Refract, and Diffract.
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Reflection • How does the reflection of
light allow you to see yourself in the mirror? It happens in two steps. First, light strikes your face and bounces off. Then, the light reflected off your face strikes the mirror and is reflected into your eyes.
• What about Sound Waves
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Echoes
• Echo - sound waves hit an object, they reflect and come back to you. You hear the sound multiple times.
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The Law of Reflection
• The beam striking the mirror is called the incident beam.
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• The beam that bounces off the mirror is called the reflected beam.
Draw this Picture:
The Law of Reflection 10.310.3
The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
• The line drawn perpendicular to the surface of the mirror is called the normal.
The Law of Reflection • The angle formed
by the incident beam and the normal is the angle of incidence.
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• The angle formed by the reflected beam and the normal is the angle of refection.
The Law of Reflection
• law of reflection- The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of refection.
• All reflected waves obey this law.
10.310.3The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
Refraction
• When a wave passes from one medium to another. It changes speed and direction. (Example: from air to water)
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• If the wave is traveling at an angle when it passes from one medium to another, it changes direction, or bends, as it changes speed.
Refraction
• Refraction- Bending of a wave caused by a change in its speed as it moves from one medium to another.
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• Light waves travel slower in water than in air. This causes light waves to change direction and bend toward the normal
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• When light waves travel from air to water, they slow down and bend toward the normal.
Refraction of Light in Water
Refraction of Light in Water
• You may have noticed that objects that are underwater seem closer to the surface than they really are.
10.310.3The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
• In the figure, the light waves reflected from the swimmer’s foot are refracted away from the normal and enter your eyes.
Refraction of Light in Water
• However, your brain assumes that all light waves have traveled in a straight line.
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• The light waves that enter your eyes seem to have come from a foot that was higher in the water.
Diffraction
• When waves strike an object, several things can happen.
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• The waves can bounce off, or be reflected.
• If the object is transparent, light waves can be refracted as they pass through it.
• Waves also can behave another way when they strike an object. The waves can bend around the object.
Diffraction
• Diffraction - an object causes a wave to change direction and bend around it.
10.310.3The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
• Diffraction and refraction both cause waves to bend. The difference is that refraction occurs when waves pass through an object, while diffraction occurs when waves pass around an object.
Diffraction 10.310.3
The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
• After they pass through the opening, the waves spread out.
Diffraction and Wavelength
• Examples of diffraction?
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Hearing Around Corners 10.310.3
The Behavior of Waves The Behavior of Waves
• Light waves have a much shorter wavelength. They are hardly diffracted at all by the door.
Diffraction of Radio Waves
• AM radio waves have longer wavelengths than FM radio waves do. Because of their longer wavelengths, AM radio waves diffract around obstacles like buildings and mountains.
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• As a result, AM radio reception is often better than FM reception around tall buildings and natural barriers such as hills.
Interference • interference
When two or more waves overlap and combine to form a new wave
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Constructive Interference • constructive interference- waves add
together.
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Destructive Interference
• destructive interference- waves cancel each other.
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Standing Waves
• standing wave - waves equal in wavelength and amplitude, travel in opposite directions, and interfere with each other.
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Standing Waves in Music
• When the string of a violin is played with a bow, it vibrates and creates standing waves.
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• Some instruments, like flutes, create standing waves in a column of air.
Resonance
• resonance - object is made to vibrate by absorbing energy at its natural frequency
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• If enough energy is absorbed, the object can vibrate so strongly that it breaks apart.
10.310.3Section CheckSection Check
Question 1
State the law of reflection.
Answer
According to the law of reflection, the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection.
10.310.3Section CheckSection Check
Question 2
__________ is the bending of a wave caused by a change in its speed as it moves from one medium to another.
A. diffractionB. diffusionC. refractionD. reflection
10.310.3Section CheckSection Check
Answer
The answer is C. The greater the change in speed is, the more the wave bends.
10.310.3Section CheckSection Check
Question 3
Which is the means by which you can hear around corners?
A. diffractionB. diffusionC. reflectionD. refraction
10.310.3Section CheckSection Check
Answer
The answer is A. Diffraction occurs when an object causes a wave to change direction and bend around it.
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