Unit4 AOS1 - Properties of Mechanical Waves Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a Mechanical Wave

A

transfer of energy without the net transfer of matter, through a medium

Energy is propagated through the wave, however, the air particles (or whatever medium) doesn’t travel with the wave, rather, the particles oscillate around their respective positions

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2
Q

Transverse Waves (name of positions, reference used for the y axis, examples)

A

Oscillations are perpendicular to direction of travel (up/down)

Crests - Maximum Positive Displacement
Troughs - Maximum Negative Displacement

Displacement is the term used on the y axis

Examples: Strings/Water Waves/Light

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3
Q

Longitudinal Waves (name of positions, reference used for the y axis, examples)

A

Oscillations are parallel to direction of travel (left/right)

Compressions - Maximum Pressure
Rarefactions - Maximum Pressure

Pressure is the term used on the y axis

Examples: Sound, Springs

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4
Q

Amplitude

A

Maximum distance from the equilibrium position

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5
Q

Wavelength

A

Distance from two identical points in the wave

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6
Q

Frequency (+period)

A

Number of cycles completed per unit of time (Hz)

Period = 1/frequency

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7
Q

Displacement-Distance Graphs

A

Plots the displacement of every point, at a specific point in time

Demonstrates Wavelength, Amplitude

Shows no indication of time

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8
Q

Displacement-Time Graphs

A

Plots the displacement of a single point, as the wave move pasts it, over time

Demonstrates Peroid, Amplitude

Shows no indication of wavelength

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9
Q

Wave Speed

A

Speed at which a wave transfers its energy

It depends only on the physical properties of the medium it travels through (material, density, temperature)

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10
Q

Constructive Interference

A

Combination of two waves (of the same sign)

Antinode

p.d. = n * wavelength

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11
Q

Destructive Interference

A

Combination of two waves (of different signs)

Node

p.d. = (n - 0.5) * wavelength

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12
Q

Doppler Effect

A

the detected frequency change due to the relative motion between a wave source and detector

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13
Q

Does the Doppler Effect have anything to do with wave speed?

A

No - as the medium has not changed

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14
Q

Doppler Effect - Moving Source

A

Results in ‘bunching of waves’ in front of the source, and, ‘spreading out of waves’ behind the source

Waves in front of the source - increased frequency (waves are closer together)

Waves behind of the source - decreased frequency (waves are further apart)

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15
Q

Doppler Effect - Moving Detector

A

Results in a change in the detected frequency
(and a change in the detected wave speed)

Moving towards the source - increased frequency
Moving away from the source - decreased frequency

no impact on wavelength

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16
Q

Reflection of Waves

A

When some or all of a waves energy is reflected back

If the ending is fixed - the wave will reflect (vertical) & invert (horizontal)

If the ending is free - the wave will just reflect (vertical)

17
Q

Resonance

A

Occurs when an external force vibrates a system at a frequency that exactly matches one of the natural frequencies

Each forced external vibration will add energy to the system, as there will be a superposition of the travelling wave and its reflection, drastically increasing the amplitude of the oscillations

18
Q

Standing Wave

A

A wave that has fixed positions of nodes & antinodes

It is the superposition of two waves travelling in the opposite direction with the same frequency and amplitude

The wave will appear not to travel

19
Q

Fundamental Frequency

A

The lowest possible frequency in a standing wave

20
Q

Requirement to form a standing wave

A

The string length must be a multiple of wavelength/2 or wavelength/4 (depending on if its a fixed end or not)

21
Q

Harmonic

A

A standing wave with a frequency equal to an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency

22
Q

Standing Waves (with 2 Fixed Ends)

A

Has a node at both ends, and an antinode in the middle

23
Q

Standing Wave (with 1 Fixed End)

A

Requires a node at the fixed end and an antinode at the free end

Reason that antinodes exist at the end - waves reflected at the free end are not inverted (which causes constructive interference)

24
Q

Diffration

A

The spread of a wave around an obstacle or through a gap

When a wave interacts with the edge of an obstacle, the wave will spread around it rather being blocked

25
Q

Extent of Diffraction

A

If diffraction is greater than roughly 0.1, then its considered substantiate