08 Light and Sound- 4th Form Flashcards
Locate the compressions and rarefactions
What is the relationship between refractive index, incident angle and refracted angle (Snell’s Law)?
Note: the angle i = angle in air
When measuring an angle of incidence, what is the most common error?
Angle of incidence is not 56°
Angle of incidence is between the incident ray and the normal
90° - 56° = 34°
incident angle = 34°
What type of wave is visible light?
It is a transverse wave- oscillations are 90° to direction of travel
What is the order of the visible spectrum?
red
orange
yellow
green
blue
indigo
violet
What shows that the chirp of each bird is the same pitch?
same number of waves in the same time
same frequency
Ultrasound is used in echo finding. Give one example of how human use ultrasonic echoes.
Trawlers send ultrasonic pulses into the ocean and time how long it takes for a reflection to return from the ocean floor.
distance = speed of sound in water (1500m/s) x time of echo
depth of ocean = depth / 2
What is the frequency of sound?
Number of vibrations per second
measured in Hertz Hz
Why does sound travel faster in solids compared to gases?
- Solids have stronger forces between particles compared to gases
- particles are closer together in a solid compared to a gas
- It is easier for vibrations to be passed between particles in a solid compared to a gas
You can find the refractive index of a block by completing the method found in the image below.
What equipment is needed and what must be measured and calculated?
Equipment: ray box, rectangular block of glass, paper, pencil, ruler, protractor
Measure the incident and refracted angle using a protractor.
Calculate the refractive index n = sin i/ sin r
OR Repeat for different angles and plot sin i against sin r. Find the gradient of the line, this equals the refractive index
An endoscope is one use of visible light. Light is sent down an optical fibre and an image of internal organs can be viewed by a doctor.
What prinicple of light does this application use?
TIR or total internal reflection of light
What happens to the speed, direction and wavelength of light when it enters a more dense medium at an angle to the normal?
Light slows down, the waves bunch up and the wavelength decreases, the waves change direction- bend towards the normal.
In a vacuum, the speed of light is 300 000 000 m/s. In air it is effectively the same. What is the refractive index of air and how does this compare to any other medium?
The refractive index of air is 1.00.
The speed of light in any other medium will be lower than 300 000 000 m/s and so the refractive index will be greater than 1.00
- i.e. the refractive index of plastic is 1.50*
- the refractive index of water is 1.33*
What property of a sound wave indicates the loudness of the sound?
amplitude
Binoculars use TIR to bend light through prisms and direct it to the back of the eye. Explain what happens in each prism?
angle of incidence = 45°
critical angle of prism is 42°
Therefore TIR occurs
If incident angle = 45°, then reflected angle= 45°
Therefore light is bent a total of 90°
What is the relationship between the critical angle and refractive index?
What is the unit for pitch of sound?
Hertz Hz
pitch = frequency
How is sound different from visible light?
sound is a longitudinal wave, light is a transverse wave
sound cannot travel through a vacuum, light can
sound travels much slower in air (340 m/s), light is much faster at 300 000 000 m/s
What type of wave is a sound wave?
Longitudinal
Medium oscillates (to and fro) parallel to direction of wave travel
If reflection is light bouncing, what is refraction?
Refraction is light bending (changing direction)
Determine the amplitude of the wave.
volts per division = 5 V/ div
amplitude = 2 division
2 divisions x 5V/division= 10V
Define the angle of refraction
the angle between the refracted ray and the normal
A prism is a triangular block of glass. The sides of the prism are not parallel.
When white light is shone through the prism, different wavelengths of light are deviated by different amounts.
What is observed and what is the effect called?
The white light splits into a range of colours called a continuous spectrum.
The effect is called dispersion
Note: This shows that white light is a mixture of colours of the rainbow