P5.1 - Wave Behaviour Flashcards
What are longitudinal waves with an example?
- Longitudinal waves vibrate parallel to the direction
of energy transfer of the waves. - Sound waves are longitudinal waves.
What are transverse waves with an example?
- Transverse waves vibrate perpendicular to the
direction of energy transfer of the waves. - Light waves are transverse waves.
What is a wave?
A wave is a disturbance in a medium that transfers energy without transferring matter.
What should wave diagrams be imagined to be doing?
- Waves are always in motion.
- Wave diagrams are drawn stationary, but the
waves should be imagined to be moving left to
right, in the direction of energy transfer.
What is the normal line?
The mean position of a particle, about which it vibrates/oscillates.
What is the amplitude?
- The maximum displacement of particles from
their mean position. - The bigger the amplitude, the more energy the
wave carries.
What is the wavelength?
- The distance from one point on a wave to the
same point on the next wave. - Distance from one peak (or trough) to the next
peak (or trough).
What is the frequency?
- The number of waves or oscillations, passing a
point every second (number of peaks passing a
point every second - easier way).. - The bigger the wavelength the smaller the
frequency.
What is the time period?
The time for a wave to complete one oscillation is the time period for a wave.
What is the difference between a time trace and a snapshot?
- A time trace shows how displacement varies with
time at a particular position. - In a time trace you could measure the period from
any point on a wave to the same point on the next
wave. - A snapshot of a wave shows how displacement
varies with distance as a particular time. - On a snapshot you can measure wavelength from
any point on the wave to the same point on the
next wave. - On either diagram you can measure amplitude
from the middle to the top or the bottom of a wave.
How are transverse waves represented using wave diagrams?
- Transverse waves are easily represented using
wave diagrams. - The peaks and troughs are perpendicular to the
normal line.
How are longitudinal waves represented on a wave diagram?
- Compressions - Particles squashed together, high
pressure - PEAKS - Rarefactions - Particles spread far apart, low
pressure - TROUGHS
What is the wave equation?
c = f x (Lambda)
c = wave speed m/s f = frequency Hz Lambda = Wavelength m
What is the equation for time period?
T=1/f
How are sound/mechanical waves created?
- Create by vibrating particles.
- Which collide with neighbouring particles.
- Transferring kinetic energy.