Chapter 25 Vocabulary

Vibration - Wiggle in time. Cannot exist in one instant, but needs time to move back and forth

Wave - Wiggle in space and time. Cannot exist in one place but must extend from one place to another

Vibrations produce waves

Simple Harmonic motion - Back and forth vibratory motion

Sine curve - A curve whose shape represents the crests and troughs of a wave

Crest - The high point on a wave as represented by a sine curve

Trough - The low point on a wave as represented by a sine curve

Midpoint of vibration - The home position, represented by a straight dashed line

Amplitude - Distance from the midpoint to the crest (or trough), measured in meters (or any other unit of distance)

Wavelength - Distance from the top of one crest to the top of the next one, measured in meters (or any other unit of distance)

Period - The time for one cycle, Units: seconds (or minutes, hrs, days, etc.)

Frequency - The number of cycles per time, generally measured in cycles per second, or hertz (Hz)

Hertz - Unit of frequency, One hertz = one vibration per second

Period-Frequency relationship - Frequency = 1/Period or Period = 1/Frequency

Wave Speed – Recall speed is distance divided by time, distance is the wavelength, period is the time - So Wave speed = wavelength divided by period, Substitute for 1/frequency for period, and equation becomes Wave speed = Wavelength times frequency

Transverse wave - A wave where the vibration (or disturbance) is at right angles to the direction the wave is travelling

Longitudinal wave - A wave where the vibration (or disturbance) is in the same direction as the wave is travelling

Interference pattern - A pattern formed by the overlapping of two or more waves that arrive in the same region at the same time

Constructive interference - Adding of two or more waves when the wave crests overlap. Result is a wave of increased amplitude

Destructive interference - Adding of two or more waves where crests of one wave overlap troughs of another. Result is a wave of decreased amplitude

Out of phase - Term to describe two waves that are destructively interfering

In phase - Term to describe two waves that are constructively interfering

Standing wave - Wave in which part of the wave remain stationary and the wave appears not to be traveling. Produced by interference between an incident and reflected wave

Nodes - The part of a standing wave that remains stationary

Antinodes - The points on a standing wave where maximum amplitude occurs

Doppler Effect - The change in perceived frequency of a wave to either the source of the wave moving, the receiver of the wave moving, or both.

Blue Shift - Increase in the measured frequency of light (Doppler effect), occurs when receiver and source of light move toward one another - Example) light we receive from Andromeda Galaxy is shifted to the blue side of the color spectrum because the Milky Way and Andromeda are getting moving toward one another

Red Shift - Decrease in the measured frequency of light (Doppler effect), occurs when receiver and source of light move away from one another - Example) light we receive from most galaxies is shifted to the red side of the color spectrum because most galaxies are moving away from the Milky Way

Bow wave - The V-shaped wave produced by an object moving on a liquid surface faster than the waves it produces (picture the wake behind a boat that is traveling faster than the waves it makes)

Shock wave - A cone-shaped wave produced by an object traveling faster than the waves it produces (Basically a 3-dimensional bow wave, Picture the “wake” behind an airplane traveling faster than the waves it produces)

Sonic boom - The sharp crack heard by a listener when the shock wave produce by an airplane traveling faster than the speed of sound arrives to their ears

Chapter 26 Vocabulary

Pitch - Term that refers to how high or low sound frequencies appear to be subjective impression of the frequency of sound

Infrasonic - Sound waves with frequencies below 20 Hz

Ultrasonic - Sound waves with frequencies above 20,000 Hz *People cannot hear infrasonic and ultrasonic sound waves

Compression - A disturbance in air or other matter where the pressure is increased - highest pressure points on a sound wave

Rarefaction - A disturbance in air or other matter where the pressure is lowered - Low pressure points on a sound wave

*Sound waves (and all longitudinal waves) travel as a series of compressions and rarefactions - Compressions are the crests, Rarefactions are the troughs - The amplitude is represented by the amount the material is compressed

Speed of Sound, temperature dependence - Sound travels faster in warm air than cold air, Speed of sound in dry air at 0 degrees Celsius is 330 m/s, Speed of sound increases by 0.60 m/s for every degree of temperature increase above 0 - So average speed of sound in room temperature air is about 340 m/s

Intensity of Sound (pg 393-394) Proportional to square of wave amplitude - is an objective (quantitative) way to quantitatively measure sound waves (as in loudness)

Loudness (pg 394) – subjective (qualitative) way to describe sound waves. Different for different people what seems “loud” to you may not seem “loud” to me

Decibel scale - The unit of sound intensity, 0 decibels is the human threshold of hearing an addition of 10 decibels means the sound intensity has been multiplied by 10

so add 10 dbIntensity multiplies by 10

add 20 dbIntensity multiplies by 100 (10 x 10)

add 30 dbIntensity multiplies by 1000 (10 x 10 x 10)

Forced Vibration - The vibration of an object that is made to vibrate by another vibrating object that is nearby

Natural Frequency - A frequency at which an object will vibrate when struck. Some objects have more than one natural frequency

Resonance - Occurs when the forced vibrations on an object match the object’s natural frequency. Increase in wave amplitude results

Beats - Occurs when two tones of slightly different frequencies are sounded together. The sound seems to fade in and out

Refraction – the bending of a wave because of a change in wave speed due to a change in medium.

Diffraction – the bending of a wave around a barrier.