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Understanding Sound Waves and Frequency

Sound is a mechanical wave that is created by vibrating objects and propagates through a medium. Sound waves are longitudinal waves that consist of alternating compressions and rarefactions transmitted through a medium. The speed at which sound travels depends on the properties of the medium, with sound traveling fastest through solids and slower through gases.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views69 pages

Understanding Sound Waves and Frequency

Sound is a mechanical wave that is created by vibrating objects and propagates through a medium. Sound waves are longitudinal waves that consist of alternating compressions and rarefactions transmitted through a medium. The speed at which sound travels depends on the properties of the medium, with sound traveling fastest through solids and slower through gases.

Uploaded by

ryancasal959
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Sound

Definition of Sound

Sound
Sound isis aa wave
wave created
created by
by
vibrating
vibrating objects
objects andand propagated
propagated
through
through aa medium
medium from
from one
one
location
location toto another.
another.
If a tree falls in a forest, and there
is no one there to hear it, does it
make a sound?

Sound
Sound isis aa physical
physical
disturbance
disturbance in in aa medium.
medium.
Based on our definition, there
IS sound in the forest, whether
a human is there to hear it or
not!.

A person to hear it is not required. The


medium (air) is required!
What type of waves are sound waves?
Sound is a mechanical wave

 The sound wave is transported


from one location to another by
means of particle-to-particle
interaction.
• If the sound wave is moving
through air, then as one air
particle is displaced from its
equilibrium position, it exerts a
push or pull on its nearest
neighbors, causing them to be
displaced from their equilibrium
position.
Since a sound wave is a

disturbance that is transported


through a medium via the
mechanism of particle-to-particle
interaction, a sound wave is
characterized as a mechanical
wave.
Check your understanding:

A sound wave is different than a light wave in that


a sound wave is
a. produced by a vibrating object and a light wave
is not.
b. not capable of traveling through a vacuum.
c. not capable of diffracting and a light wave is.
d. capable of existing with a variety of frequencies
and a light wave has a single frequency.
--When a tuning fork vibrates, it creates areas of high
pressure (compressions) and low pressure
(rarefactions).
--As the tines of the fork vibrate back and forth, they
push on neighboring air particles.
--The forward motion of a tine pushes air molecules
horizontally to the right and the backward retraction
of the tine creates a low-pressure area allowing the
air particles to move back to the left.
Graphing a Sound Wave.

Sound as a pressure wave

The variation of pressure with distance is a useful way to


represent a sound wave graphically. But remember – sound is
actually a longitudinal wave.
Check your understanding

A sound wave is a pressure wave; regions of high


pressure (compressions) and low pressure (rarefactions)
are established as the result of the vibrations of the
sound source. These compressions and rarefactions
result because sound
a. is more dense than air and thus has more inertia.
b. waves have a speed that is dependent only upon the
properties of the medium.
c. can be diffracted around obstacles.
d. vibrates longitudinally; the longitudinal movement of air
produces pressure fluctuations.
Frequency of Sound
--The vibrating object that creates sound could be
the vocal cords of a person, the vibrating string of a
guitar or violin, the vibrating tines of a tuning fork,
or the vibrating diaphragm of a radio speaker.
--As a sound wave moves through a medium, each
particle of the medium vibrates at the same
frequency. This makes sense since each particle
vibrates due to the motion of its nearest neighbor.
--And of course the frequency at which each particle
vibrates is the same as the frequency of the original
source of the sound wave.
Frequency of Sound Example
A guitar string vibrating at 500 Hz will set
the air particles in the room vibrating at the
same frequency of 500 Hz, which carries a
sound signal to the ear of a listener, which is
detected as a 500 Hz sound wave.
The frequency of sound
• We hear frequencies of sound as having
different pitch.
• A low frequency sound has a low pitch, like
the rumble of a big truck.
• A high-frequency sound has a high pitch, like
a whistle or siren.
• In speech, women have higher fundamental
frequencies than men.
Frequency of Sound
• The human ear is capable of detecting sound
waves with a wide range of frequencies, ranging
between approximately 20 Hz to 20 000 Hz.
• Any sound with a frequency below the audible
range of hearing (i.e., less than 20 Hz) is known
as an infrasound.
• Any sound with a frequency above the audible
range of hearing (i.e., more than 20 000 Hz) is
known as an ultrasound.
Animation showing Fre
quency and Pitch
Ultrasound?

 Ultrasound is a medical imaging technique


that uses high frequency sound waves and
their echoes.
 The technique is similar to the echolocation

used by bats, whales and dolphins.


How it works: Ultrasound
 The ultrasound machine transmits high-
frequency (1 to 5 megahertz) sound pulses
into your body using a probe.
 The sound waves travel into your body and
hit a boundary between tissues (e.g. between
fluid and soft tissue, soft tissue and bone).
 Some of the sound waves get reflected back to
the probe, while some travel on further until
they reach another boundary and get
reflected.
 The reflected waves are picked up by the
probe and relayed to the machine.
 The machine calculates the distance from
the probe to the tissue or organ
(boundaries) using the speed of sound in
tissue and the time of the each echo's
return (usually on the order of millionths
of a second).
 The machine displays the distances and
intensities of the echoes on the screen,
forming a two dimensional image like the
one shown below.
What about animals?
Dogs can detect frequencies as low
as approximately 50 Hz and as
high as 45 000 Hz.
Cats can detect frequencies as low

as approximately 45 Hz and as
high as 85 000 Hz.
Frequency and music

Certain sound waves when played (and heard)


simultaneously will produce a particularly
pleasant sensation when heard. Such sound
waves form the basis of intervals in music.
For example, any two sounds whose frequencies
make a 2:1 ratio are said to be separated by an
octave and result in a particularly pleasing
sensation when heard. That is, two sound waves
sound good when played together if one sound
has twice the frequency of the other.
Loudness
Intensity
Intensity: the rate at which a wave’s
energy flows through an area
Sound intensity depends on
 Amplitude

 Distance from source

Measured in decibels (dB)


Loudness is sort of like
intensity, but…
Loudness is Subjective! (This means it depends
on the person who is hearing it.)
Loudness is a personal, physical response to the
intensity of sound.
As intensity increases, so does loudness, but
loudness also depends on the listener’s ears and
brain.
Intensity is caused by the
Amplitude of the vibration
Example:
A vibrating guitar string forces surrounding air molecules to be
compressed and expanded.
The energy that is carried by the wave is imparted to the medium by
the vibrating string.
The amount of energy that is transferred to the medium is dependent
on the amplitude of vibrations of the guitar string.
If more energy is put into the plucking of the string, then the string
vibrates with a greater amplitude. The greater amplitude of
vibration of the guitar string thus imparts more energy to the
medium, causing air particles to be displaced a greater distance
from their rest position.
The Decibel Scale:

The decibel (abbreviated dB) is the


unit used to measure the intensity of a
sound.
The decibel scale is a little odd

because the human ear is incredibly


sensitive.
 Your ears can hear everything from your
fingertip brushing lightly over your skin
to a loud jet engine .
 In terms of power, the sound of the jet

engine is about 1,000,000,000,000 times


more powerful than the smallest audible
sound. That's a big difference!
 On the decibel scale, the smallest
audible sound (the threshold of
hearing) is 0 dB.
 A sound 10 times more powerful is

10 dB.
 A sound 100 times more powerful

than near total silence is 20 dB


 A sound 1,000 times more powerful

than near total silence is 30 dB.


Intensity (Loudness) is measured in decibels:
Intensity # of Times
Source Level Greater Than TOH

Threshold of Hearing 0 dB 100


Rustling Leaves 10 dB 101
Whisper 20 dB 102
Normal Conversation 60 dB 106
Busy Street Traffic 70 dB 107
Vacuum Cleaner 80 dB 108
Large Orchestra 
98 dB 109.8
Walkman at Maximum Level 100 dB 1010
Front Rows of Rock Concert 110 dB 1011
Threshold of Pain 130 dB 1013
Military Jet Takeoff 140 dB 1014
Instant Perforation of Eardrum 160 dB 1016
Check your understanding
 A mosquito's buzz is often rated with a
decibel rating of 40 dB.
 Normal conversation is often rated at 60 dB.

 How many times more intense is normal

conversation compared to a mosquito's


buzz?
The speed of sound depends only
on the properties of the medium it’s
travelling through.

The Speed of Sound


Speed of Sound
In general, sound travels fastest through
solids.
This is because molecules in a solid
medium are much closer together than
those in a liquid or gas, allowing sound
waves to travel more quickly through it.
In fact, sound waves travel over 17 times
faster through steel than through air.
Speed of Sound

Sound also travels faster in liquids than in


gases because molecules are still more
tightly packed.
In fresh water, sound waves travel 4 times
faster than in air!
The speed of sound

The speed of sound in air is 343 meters per


second (660 miles per hour) at one
atmosphere of pressure and room
temperature (21°C).
The speed of sound
through a gas depends on
the temperature.
When we look at the properties of a gas, we see
that only when molecules collide with each other
can the compressions and rarefactions of a sound
wave be passed along. So, it makes sense that the
speed of sound depends on how often the particles
collide. At higher temperatures, molecules collide
more often, giving the sound wave more chances to
move forward rapidly.

Speed of Sound
Review Question:
What characteristic of a
sound wave determines
the pitch of the sound?
Natural Frequency
The frequency or frequencies at which
an object tends to vibrate with when
hit, struck, plucked, strummed or
somehow disturbed is known as the
natural frequency of the object.
Natural Frequency
Some objects tend to vibrate at a single frequency and
they are often said to produce a pure tone. A flute tends to
vibrate at a single frequency, producing a very pure tone.
Other objects vibrate and produce more complex waves
with a set of frequencies that have a whole number
mathematical relationship between them; these are said to
produce a rich sound. A tuba tends to vibrate at a set of
frequencies that are mathematically related by whole
number ratios; it produces a rich tone.
Natural Frequency

Other objects will vibrate at a set of


multiple frequencies that have no
simple mathematical relationship
between them. These objects are not
musical at all and the sounds that they
create could be described as noise.
Natural Frequency
Harmonics
The same note from different instruments
has different qualities because the sounds
from instruments are rarely pure notes,
i.e. of one frequency.
Rather they consist of one main note
which is predominant and other smaller
notes called overtones.
Harmonics
Compare the same note played on a flute and a vi
olin
Harmonics
The main note or fundamental note is also referred to as the
first harmonic and if it has a frequency f, the overtone with
frequency 2f is called the second harmonic and the overtone
with frequency 3f is called the third harmonic and so on. The
sum of all the harmonics is the waveform and determines the
quality of the sound.
Harmonics and instruments
The same note sounds different when played on different instruments
because the sound from an instrument is usually not a single pure
frequency.
The variation comes from the harmonics, multiples of the fundamental
note.
A C note played on a piano and played on a guitar:
Standing Waves
 Caused by the interference of two identical waves
Caused by the interference of two identical waves
(or a wave and its reflected wave) travelling in
opposite directions in a medium.
 Wave pattern of alternating nodes and antinodes.

 Nodes - areas of no displacement of the medium

caused by destructive interference


 Antinodes - areas of maximum displacement of

the medium caused by constructive interference.


Note: One wavelength
(shown in the diagram) is
equal to twice the
distance between nodes. Antinode node
Harmonics and Overtones
1st harmonic = fundamental
frequency
2 harmonic = 1 overtone
nd st

3 harmonic = 2 overtone
rd nd

4 harmonic = 3 overtone
th rd

and so on...
Sound Interference – Interference of

sound waves produce BEATS

Sound Interference – Interference of


sound waves produce BEATS
The Doppler Effect

The Doppler effect is a phenomenon observed


whenever the source of waves is moving with
respect to an observer.

The Doppler effect is an apparent upward shift in


frequency for the observer when the source is
approaching, and an apparent downward shift in
frequency when the source is receding.
Let's listen....

One more...

The Doppler Effect


The Doppler Effect on The Big Bang Theory

The Doppler Effect


As a car approached with its siren blasting, the pitch of the siren sound (a
measure of the siren's frequency) was high; and then suddenly after the
car passed by, the pitch of the siren sound was low. That was the Doppler
effect - a shift in the apparent frequency for a sound wave produced by a
moving source.
The Doppler Effect
The source of sound always emits the same frequency.
Therefore, for the same period of time, the same number of
waves must fit between the source and the observer. If the
distance is large, then the waves can be spread apart; but if the
distance is small, the waves must be compressed into the
smaller distance. For these reasons, if the source is moving
towards the observer, the observer perceives sound waves
reaching him or her at a more frequent rate (high pitch). And if
the source is moving away from the observer, the observer
perceives sound waves reaching him or her at a less frequent
rate (low pitch). It is important to note that the effect does not
result because of an actual change in the frequency of the
source.
Important Note
For the Doppler Effect to occur,
the source may be moving, the
listener may be moving, or both
may be moving.
Sound wave Behavior:
Reflection
Sound wave Behavior:
Reflection

An echo is a reflected sound wave


Reflection of Sound
Builders of auditoriums and concert halls avoid
the use of hard, smooth materials in the
construction of their halls. With a hard material
such as concrete, most of the sound wave is
reflected by the walls and little is absorbed.
Walls and ceilings of concert halls are made
softer materials such as fiberglass and acoustic
tiles. These materials have a greater ability to
absorb sound. This gives the room more
pleasing acoustic properties.
Reflection can also cause
test questions:
You’re standing at the bottom of a
canyon, and wondering how far away
the other side is. To figure out the
distance across the canyon, you could
yell, and clock the time until you heard
your echo. Let's say this took exactly 3.0
seconds. Since you took physics, you
know that sound travels at about 0.2
miles per second. How far away is the
other wall of the canyon?
 A system that uses reflected waves to determine
the distance & location of objects.
 Uses the d=v/t formula

 d = distance

 V= wave speed

 t = time it takes for wave to reflected off

object

What is sonar?
SONAR
High- frequency ultrasonic waves that

are use in a system called

Sound Navigation And Ranging



 Ships send sound waves into water that
travels in a straight line until it hits an
object, the wave is then reflected back to
the ship, the time it takes to travel back
and forth is measured and used to
calculate the distance traveled.
Reflection
A ship on the surface of the water sends
a SONAR signal, and it bounces off a
submarine in the water. Calculate the
distance of the submarine from the ship
if the signal is returned in 4.0 seconds.
(The speed of sound in water is 1450
meters/sec).
Sound Wave Behavior:
Diffraction

Diffraction involves a change in direction of waves as


they pass through an opening or around a barrier in
their path.
Diffraction: Light vs Sound

Imagine going to a baseball game, and you discover that


your seat is directly behind a wide post. You cannot see
the game, of course, because the light waves from the field
are blocked. But you have little trouble hearing the game,
since sound waves simply diffract around the post.
Sound Wave Behavior:
Diffraction

The reason for the difference—that is, why sound


diffraction is more pronounced than light diffraction—is
that sound waves are much, much larger than light waves.
The amount of diffraction increases with increasing
wavelength and decreases with decreasing wavelength.
Future test question:

Why do sound waves


diffract more than light
waves?
Forced Vibration
If you were to take a guitar string and
stretch it to a given length and a given
tightness and have a friend pluck it, you
would hear a noise; but the noise would
not even be close in comparison to the
loudness produced by an actual guitar. If
the string is attached to the sound box of
the guitar, the vibrating string is capable
of forcing the sound box into vibrating at
that same natural frequency.
The sound box in turn forces air particles inside the
box into vibrational motion at the same natural
frequency as the string. The entire system (string,
guitar, and enclosed air) begins vibrating and forces
surrounding air particles into vibrational motion.
The tendency of one object to force another adjoining
object into vibrational motion is referred to as a
forced vibration. This causes an increase in the
amplitude and thus loudness of the sound.
Resonance
• Be careful though!
• Forced vibration is not the same thing as
resonance.
• Resonance occurs when something starts
vibrating because of another vibrating object
that isn’t touching it!

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