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Waves Notes

Vibrations and Waves 05/05/2011 The document discusses simple harmonic motion, energy in the simple harmonic oscillator, the period and sinusoidal nature of SHM, the simple pendulum, damped harmonic motion, forced vibrations and resonance, wave motion, types of waves, energy transported by waves, intensity related to amplitude and frequency, reflection and transmission of waves, interference, standing waves and resonance, refraction, and diffraction. Key concepts include simple harmonic motion, restoring forces, amplitude, period, frequency, energy proportional to the square of the amplitude, sinusoidal motion, transverse and longitudinal waves, interference, and mathematical representations of traveling waves.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views7 pages

Waves Notes

Vibrations and Waves 05/05/2011 The document discusses simple harmonic motion, energy in the simple harmonic oscillator, the period and sinusoidal nature of SHM, the simple pendulum, damped harmonic motion, forced vibrations and resonance, wave motion, types of waves, energy transported by waves, intensity related to amplitude and frequency, reflection and transmission of waves, interference, standing waves and resonance, refraction, and diffraction. Key concepts include simple harmonic motion, restoring forces, amplitude, period, frequency, energy proportional to the square of the amplitude, sinusoidal motion, transverse and longitudinal waves, interference, and mathematical representations of traveling waves.

Uploaded by

swhchang1
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Vibrations and Waves 05/05/2011

11-1 Simple Harmonic Motion


vibrates, oscillates over same path – takes same amount of time
periodic - moving in same path over time
equilibrium position – the position of mass at this point
restoring force – force on mass that acts in direction of returning mass
to equilibrium force
k – spring stiffness constant, constant
displacement – distance of mass from equilibrium point to any
momentum
amplitude – greatest distance from equilibrium point (A)
cycle- complete to-and-fro motion from initial point back to same point
period – time required to complete one cycle (T)
frequency – number of complete cycles per second (f)
Equation:

simple harmonic motion – system which restoring force is directly


proportional to negative of displacement. (SHM)
Simple harmonic oscillator – system using simple harmonic motion
(SHO)
11-2 Energy in the Simple Harmonic Oscillator
At extreme points: x = -A , x = A
Total mechanical energy of a simple harmonic oscillator is proportional
to the square of the amplitude.
11-3 The Period and Sinusoidal Nature of SHM
period does not depend on amplitude
Formula (Frequency and Period):

Frequency and period of SHM do not depend on amplitude


Sinusoidal Motion
X = A sin(wt)
Velocity and Acceleration as Functions of Time
V = -Vmax sin(wt)
11-4 The simple Pendulum
simple pendulum – small object suspended from the end of lightweight cord.
Formula:

11-5 Damped Harmonic Motion


damped harmonic motion – typical graph of displacement as function of time
of a spring oscillating until it stops.
Underdamped – system makes several swings before coming to rest
Overdamped – damping so large that it takes long time to reach equlibrium.
Critical damping – equilibrium reached at shortest time
11-6 Forced Vibrations; Resonance
forced vibration – have external force applied to it that has its own particular
frequency
natural frequency -

resonance – effect which damping is small and increase in amplitude is large


resonant frequency – natural vibrating frequency of a system
11-7 Wave Motion
mechanical waves – oscillates about an equilibrium point
pulse – wave bump
continuous / periodic wave – disturbance that is continuous and oscillating;
the source is a vibration or oscillation.
Amplitude – maximum height of a crest, or depth of a rough relative to
normal level
Wavelength – two successive crests
Frequency –number of crests that pass a given point per unit time
Period- 1/f, the time elapsed between two successive crests passing by the
same point in space
Wave velocity – velocity at which wave crests move
Formula:

11-8 Types of Waves: Transverse and Longitudinal


Transverse wave – wave that moves up and down, vibrates up and down
Longitudinal wave – waves that move left and right, along direction of waves
motion
Compressions – area where coil are momentarily close together
Expansions – regions wehre coils are momentarily far apart
Speed of longitudinal Waves:

Other Waves: Compression waves, surface waves


Ex: Earthquake – transverse waves travel through body of earth are called S
waves (shear) and longitudinal waves are called P waves (pressure)
11-9 Energy Transported by Waves
energy is transported by a wave is proportional to the square of the
amplitude.
Intensity – power transported across area perpendicular ot energy flow
Important expressions:
11-10 Intensity Related to Amplitude and Frequency
E = ½ kA^2
Intensity – power transported across area perpendicular to direction of
energy flow
11-11 Reflection and Transmission of Waves
wave fronts – points along wave forming wave crest
ray – line draw in direction of wave motion, perpendicular to wave front
plane waves – far from source and lost almost all curvature
incident waves – angle that incoming wave
law of reflection – angle of reflection equals angle of incidence
11-12 Interference; Principle of Superposition
Interference – what happens when two waves pass through same region of
space at same time
Principle of superposition - resultant displacement is algebraic sum of
separate displacements
Destructive interference – waves with opposite displacements at instant they
pass one another, they add to zero
Constructive interference – instance two pulses overlap, produce resultant
displacement greater than displacement of either pulses.
Phase – relative position of crest
In phase – during interference
Out of phase – when destruction occurs
11-13 Standing Waves; Resonance
standing wave – traveling waves interfering in such a way with large
amplitude
nodes- point of destructive interference, cord is remaining still at all times
antinodes – oscillates with maximum amplitude
natural frequencies / resonance frequencies – frequencies at which standing
waves are produced
fundamental frequency – one antinode, lowest frequency.
Overtones – other natural frequencies
Harmonics – vibrating string they are whole number multiples of the
fundamental
First harmonic – fundamental natural frequency
Second harmonic – first overtone, vibration under fundamental with two
loops.
11-14 Refraction
refraction – when transmitted wave moves in a different direction than
incident waves
sinx2/sinx1 = v2/v1
11-15 Diffraction
diffraction – when waves bend around an obstacle and pass into region
behind
only if wavelength is smaller than size of object will there bye a significant
shadow region
theta (radian) is close to

11-16 Mathematical Representation of a Traveling Wave


displacement, amplitude = x, A

Summary
05/05/2011
05/05/2011

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