Physics Waves March 2019 Flashcards
What are the two types of waves?
Longitudinal and Transverse.
What happens in longitudinal waves?
- The vibrations that cause the wave are parallel to the energy transfer.
- It needs a material to travel in e.g. air.
- Squashed sections are called compressions.
- Stretched sections are called rarefactions.
What happens in transverse waves?
- The vibrations that cause the wave are at right-angles to the energy transfer.
- Doesn’t need a material to travel in.
What waves are transverse or longitudinal or both?
Transverse = Water and any electromagnetic wave. Longitudinal = Sound waves. Both = Seismic/shock waves.
What are the wave characteristics?
Amplitude, wavelength, peak/trough, frequency, period and wave speed.
What is frequency?
The number of waves made every second.
f = # of waves/time (s)
Hz - Hertz
What is amplitude?
The distance from zero/rest position to a peak or trough.
m - Meters
What is wavelength?
The distance from two peaks or troughs.
m - Meters
What is a period?
The time it takes to produce a wave.
Time = 1/frequency
s - Seconds
What is wave speed?
How far the energy in a wave is transferred in a certain time.
Velocity = frequency x wavelength v = fλ
m/s - Meters per Second
What are peaks and troughs?
Peak - The highest point of the wave (transverse) or the centre of the compression (longitudinal).
Trough - The lowest point of the wave (transverse) or the centre of the rarefaction (longitudinal).
What are the characteristics of reflected light?
Normal = Imaginary line 90 degrees to surface.
Incident ray = The wave before being reflected.
Reflected ray = The wave after being reflected.
Angle of incidence = Angle of which the incident ray hit the surface (should = angle of reflection).
Angle of reflection = Angle of which the reflected ray was reflected (should = angle of incidence).
What is diffuse reflection?
When both the angle of incidence and reflection are the same (for multiple waves) but the direction of the rays are not the same.
Caused when the surface isn’t flat/smooth.
What are real and virtual images?
Real - You can see the image on a piece of paper.
Virtual - You cannot see the image.
What do magnified and reduced mean?
Magnified - The image is bigger than the object.
Reduced - The image is smaller than the object.