4.4 Waves Flashcards
what is a progressive wave?
a progressive wave carries energy from one place to another, but not matter
what are the two types of waves?
transverse and longitudinal
define longitudinal waves
waves have oscillations that are parallel to the direction of energy transfer
define transverse waves
waves which have oscillations perpendicular to the direction of the energy transfer
define displacement
Distance from the equilibrium position in a particular direction
define amplitude
the maximum displacement from the equilibrium position
define wavelength
minimum distance between two points in phase on adjacent waves, for example, the distance from one peak to the next or from on compression to the next
define period
the time it takes for one complete oscillation to occur at any point
what is anti phase
Two particles have a phase difference of 180 degrees
For example when one particle reaches its maximum displacement at the same time as the other reaches its maximum negative displacement
define phase difference
the difference in phase angle by which one wave lags behind another, measured in radians or degrees
define frequency
the number of complete oscilations that pass a point per unit time
define wave speed
the distance the wave travels per unit time
what is the equation for frequency?
f = 1/T (T = period)
what is the phase difference formula
Phase difference = x (distance between two points) / wave length x 360 (or 2pie)
Examples of transverse waves
Waves on the surface of water
all EM waves
Waves on a stretched string
S - waves produced in earthquakes
outline an experiment using an oscilloscope to determine the frequency of a wave
- used to determine the frequency of a wave
- use a microphone to generate a graph of p.d. against time (microphone converts sound waves into electrical signals)
-voltage on y axis (controlled by GAIN DIAL, volts per division), time on the x axis (controlled by TIMEBASE DIAL, seconds per division)
-each horizontal square represents a certain time interval. This is called timebase
-
use frequency = 1/t (t=period of wave in seconds) to calculate frequency
(note if the time base is turned off, the wave no longer moves across the screen making it easy to look at the intensity of the wave)
in a graphical representation of a longitudinal wave, what parts are the peaks and troughs?
rarefraction = trough (where the lines far apart) compression = peak (where the lines bunch up)
what is reflection and what is the key rule?
Reflection occurs when a wave changes direction at a boundary between two different media, remaining in the original equilibrium.
the angle of incidence is ALWAYS equal to the angle of reflection
what is refraction?
refraction occurs when a wave changes speed and direction as it travels through a different medium, this depends on how optically dense the medium is (bending of a wave)
what is diffraction?
the spreading of a wave through a small gap or around an obstacle, the effect is most significant when the gap width is equal to the wavelength, noticeable effects when the gap width is several wavelengths wide
when is diffraction effect the most significant and what happens when the wavelength is smaller than the gap size
when the size of the gap is about the same size as the wavelength of the wave
and small wave length will not diffract
when waves reflect, refract and diffract what happens in terms of speed, wave length and frequency
reflect: frequency and wavelength do not change
Refract: has affect on wavelength, but not frequency
Diffract: speed, wavelength and f do not change
what is plane polarisation? what types of waves can be polarised?
plane polarisation is when a wave is restricted so that it only oscillates in one direction, only TRANSVERSE waves can be polarised
what is the wave speed equation?
v = fλ
with questions concerning EM radiation, all EM waves travel at c = 3 x10^8