Topic 5 - Waves Pt1 Flashcards

1
Q

What do waves do?

A
  • a progressive (moving) wave carries energy from one place to another without transferring any material
  • the transfer of energy is in the same direction as the wave is travelling
  • as waves carry energy the source of the wave loses energy
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2
Q

What’s the displacement of a wave?

A

(Meters)

How far a point in the wave has moved from its undisturbed position

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3
Q

What’s the amplitude of a wave?

A

Meters

The maximum magnitude of the displacement

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4
Q

What’s the wavelength of a wave?

A

Meters

The length of one whole wave cycle (from crest to crest or trough to trough)

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5
Q

What’s the period of a wave?

A

Seconds

The time taken for a whole cycle (vibration) to complete

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6
Q

What’s the frequency of a wave?

A

Hertz

The number of cycles per second passing a given point

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7
Q

What’s the phase of a wave?

A

A measurement of the position of a certain point along the wave cycle

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8
Q

What’s the phase difference of a wave?

A

The amount one wave lags behind another

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9
Q

How would you find frequency?

A

Frequency = 1 / period
f = 1 / T
1 Hz = 1s*-1

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10
Q

How would you calculate wave speed?

A

Speed of wave (v) = frequency (f) x wavelength

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11
Q

What’s a longitudinal wave?

A
  • it consists of alternate compressions & rarefactions of the medium it’s travelling through
  • compressions & rarefactions create pressure variations
  • at point of compression, molecules are closer together, increasing pressure at that point
  • at point of rarefaction, molecules are further apart, which means a lower pressure at that point
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12
Q

What’s an example of a longitudinal wave?

A

A sound wave

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13
Q

What are transverse waves?

A

The vibrate perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer

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14
Q

What are 2 examples of a transverse wave?

A
  • all electromagnetic waves

- water waves

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15
Q

What 2 waves can you draw a transverse wave?

A
  • on displacement (y) against distance along the path of the wave (x) where you can read the wavelength from the x axis
  • displacement (y) against time (x) you can measure 1 period from the x axis
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16
Q

What happens when a wave is reflected?

A

-the wave is bounced back when it hits a boundary

17
Q

What happens when a wave is refracted?

A
  • the wave changes direction as it enters a different medium
  • the change in direction is a result of a wave slowing Down or speeding up
18
Q

Define intensity?

A

The rate of flow of energy per unit area at right angles to the direction of travel of the wave
Units: W m*-2

19
Q

What’s the equation for intensity?

A

Intensity = power / area

20
Q

What properties do em waves have in common?

A
  • travel in a vacuum at the speed of 3 x 108 ms-1
  • they’re transverse consisting of vibrating electric and magnetic fields which are at right angles to each other and to the direction of travel
  • they can refracted, reflected and diffracted and can undergo interference
  • they carry energy
  • they can be polarised
21
Q

What is the plane of polarisation?

A

-the plane in which a wave vibrates

Eg. A rope would be polarised in the vertical plane by the fence

22
Q

What’s plane polarisation?

A

It’s polarising a wave so it only oscillates in 1 direction

23
Q

How can you prove that light is transverse?

A

By polarising it as polarisation can only happen for transverse waves

24
Q

What happens when the transmission axes of 2 polarising filters are aligned?

A

All the light that passes through the first filter also passes through the second

25
What happens when the transmission axes of 2 polarising filters are not aligned, and the second filter is rotated?
- the amount of light that passes through the second filter varies - as it’s rotated less light will be able to get through - the intensity of the light getting through the second filter will gradually decrease
26
What happens when the transmission axes of 2 polarising filters at 45 degrees to each other?
The intensity will be half that getting through the first filter
27
What happens when the transmission axes of 2 polarising filters are at right angles to each other?
No light will pass through - intensity is 0 (If you continue to turn it the intensity will begin to increase again, when the two axis realign after a 180 degree rotation, all the light will be able to pass through the second filter)
28
Explain what would happen if you direct a beam of unpolarised light at a reflective surface then view the reflected Ray through a polarising filter?
- the intensity of light leaving the filter changes with the orientation of the filter - the intensity changes because at certain angles light is partially polarised when it’s reflected - (this is used to remove unwanted reflections in photography & in Polaroid glasses to remove glare)
29
Explain why metal grilles are used to polarise microwaves?
- because polarising filters don’t work on them as there wavelength is too long - instead metal grilles are used - intensity drops to 0 when the plane of polarisation of the metal grille is at right angles to the plane of polarisation of the microwaves, because the grille is absorbing their energy