Assingment 14

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course PHY 232

If your solution to stated problem does not match the given solution, you should self-critique per instructions at

http://vhcc2.vhcc.edu/dsmith/geninfo/labrynth_created_fall_05/levl1_22/levl2_81/file3_259.htm.

Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a phrase-

by-phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or do not

understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in completing

the assignment, before you look at the given solution.

014. `Query 12

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Question: `qquery doppler shift experiment (experiment was to be read and viewed only) ****

explain why the frequency of the sound observed when the buzzer moves toward you is greater

than that of the stationary buzzer and why this frequency is greater than that observed when

the buzzer is moving away from you

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Your solution:

When the buzzer moves towards a person the sound appears to be greater because the pulses

emitted by the source are received in a shorter time, while when the buzzer is stationary then

the pulse emmitted will take longer to approach the person, and hence the frequency is higher

at approaching than the stationary buzzer.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`a** The 'pulses' emitted by an approaching source in a certain time interval are all received

in a shorter time interval, since the last 'pulse' is emitted closer to the source than the

first and therefore arrives sooner than if the source was still. So the frequency is higher.

If the source is moving away then the last 'pulse' is emitted further from the source than if

the source was still, hence arrives later, so the pulses are spread out over a longer time

interval and the frequency is lower.

GOOD EXPLANATION FROM STUDENT:

Well, for the purposes of this explanation, I am going to explain the movement of the buzzer

in one dimention which will be towards and away. The buzzer is actually moving in a circle

which means it exists in three dimentions but is moving in two dimentions with relation to the

listener. However, using trigonometry we can determine that at almost all times the buzzer is

moving either towards or away from the listener so I will explain this in terms of one

dimention.

}When a buzzer is 'buzzing' it is emitting sound waves at a certain frequency. This frequency

appears to change when the buzzer moves toward or away from the listener but the actual

frequency never changes from the original frequency. By frequency we mean that a certain

number of sound waves are emitted in a given time interval (usually x number of cycles in a

second). So since each of the waves travel at the same velocity they will arrive at a certain

vantage point at the same frequency that they are emitted. So If a 'listener' were at this

given vantage point 'listening', then the listener would percieve the frequency to be what it

actually is. Now, if the buzzer were moving toward the listener then the actual frequency

being emitted by the buzzer would remain the same. However, the frequency percieved by the

listener would be higher than the actual frequency. This is because, at rest or when the

buzzer is not moving, all of the waves that are emitted are traveling at the same velocity and

are emitted from the same location so they all travel the same distance. But, when the buzzer

is moving toward the listener, the waves are still emitted at the same frequency, and the

waves still travel at the same velocity, but the buzzer is moving toward the listener, so when

a wave is emitted the buzzer closes the distance between it and the listener a little bit and

there fore the next wave emitted travels less distance than the previous wave. So the end

result is that each wave takes less time to reach the listener than the previously emitted

wave. This means that more waves will reach the listener in a given time interval than when

the buzzer was at rest even though the waves are still being emitted at the same rate. This is

why the frequency is percieved to be higher when the buzzer is moving toward the listener.

By the same token, if the same buzzer were moving away from the listener then the actual

frequency of the waves emitted from the buzzer would be the same as if it were at rest, but

the frequency percieved by the listener will be lower than the actual frequency. This is

because, again at rest the actual frequency will be the percieved frequency. But when the

buzzer is moving away from the listener, the actual frequency stays the same, the velocity of

the waves stays the same, but because the buzzer moves away from the listener a little bit

more each time it emits a wave, the distance that each wave must travel is a little bit more

than the previously emitted wave. So therefore, less waves will pass by the listener in a

given time interval than if the buzzer were not moving. This will result in a lower percieved

frequency than the actual frequency. **

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique Rating:Ok

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Question: `qquery General College Physics and Principles of Physics: what is a decibel?

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Your solution:

A decibel can be explained as a unit used to express relative difference in power or

intensity, usually between two electrical signals equal to ten times common log of the ratio

of the two levels.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`a** dB = 10 log( I / I0 ), where I is the intensity of the sound in units of power per unit

area and I0 is the 'hearing threshold' intensity.

MORE EXTENSIVE EXPLANATION FROM STUDENT:

Sound is possible because we exist in a medium of air. When a sound is emitted, a concussive

force displaces the air around it and some amount energy is transferred into kinetic energy as

air particles are smacked away from the force. These particles are now moving away from the

initial force and collide into other air particles and send them moving and ultimately through

a series of collisions the kinetic energy is traveling out in all directions and the air

particles are what is carrying it. The behavior of this kinetic energy is to travel in waves.

These waves each carry some amount of kinetic energy and the amount of energy that they carry

is the intensity of the waves. Intensities of waves are given as a unit of power which is

watts per square meter. Or since the waves travel in all directions they move in three

dimentions and this unit measures how many watts of energy hits a square meter of the surface

which is measuring the intensity. But we as humans don't percieve the intensities of sound as

they really are. For example, a human ear would percieve sound B to be twice as loud as sound

A when sound B is actually 10 times as loud as sound A. Or a sound that is ...

1.0 * 10^-10 W/m^2 is actually 10 times louder than a sound that is

1.0 * 10^-11 W/m^2 but the human ear would percieve it to only be twice as loud.

The decibel is a unit of intensity for sound that measures the intensity in terms of how it is

percieved to the human ear. Alexander Graham Bell invented the decibel. Bell originally

invented the bel which is also a unit of intensity for waves. The decibel is one tenth of a

bel and is more commonly used. The formula for determing the intensity in decibels is ...

Intensity in decibles = the logarithm to the base 10 of the sound's intensity/ I base 0

I base 0 is the intensity of some reference level and is usually taken as the minimum

intensity audible to an average person which is also called the 'threshold of hearing'.

Since the threshold of hearing is in the denominator, if a sound is this low or lower the

resulting intensity will be 0 decibles or inaudible. **

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique Rating:Ok

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Question: `qgen phy what is the difference between the node-antinode structure of the

harmonics a standing wave in a string and in an organ pipe closed at one end

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Your solution:

The open pipe produces only the harmonics that occur with a sequence of nodes and antinodes

which includes antinodes at both ends. The wavelengths are the same as for a string of the

same length, having nodes at both ends.

The closed pipe produces only the harmonics which have a node at the closed end and an

antinode at the open end. The resulting sequence of possible wavelengths is therefore

different than for an open pipe.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`a** In a string there are nodes at both ends so the harmonics are described the the

configurations NAN, NANAN, NANANAN, etc.. In a pipe closed at one end there is a node at one

end and an antinode at the other so the possible configurations are NA, NANA, NANANA, etc..

displacement nodes are at both ends of the string, so the structure is N &&& N, where &&& is

any sequence of nodes and antinodes that results in an alternating sequence.

The possibilities for the fixed-end string are therefore NAN, NANAN, NANANAN, ... , containing

2, 4, 6, 8, ..., quarter-wavelengths in the length of the string.

Possible wavelengths are therefore 2 L, 1 L, 2/3 L, ..., where L is the length of the string.

For an open organ pipe, there are nodes at both ends so the configuration must be A &&& A.

Possibilities include ANA, ANANA, ANANANA, ANANANANA, ..., containing 2, 4, 6, 8, ...,

quarter-wavelengths.

Possible wavelengths are therefore 2 L, 1 L, 2/3 L, ..., where L is the length of the pipe.

These possible wavelengths are the same as for a fixed-end string of the same length.

For an organ pipe open at one end and closed at the other, the configuration must be N &&& A.

Possibilities include NA, NANA, NANANA, NANANANA, ..., containing 1, 3, 5, 7, ..., quarter-

wavelengths.

Possible wavelengths are therefore 4 L, 4/3 L, 4/5 L, 4/7 L, ...

STUDENT QUESTION

My understanding is that open tube produces all harmonics?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

When I read over it I decided the given solution should be improved; I've inserted the new

solution above. It should be somewhat clearer than the old solution.

I think I know, but I'm not 100% sure what you mean by 'all harmonics'. So be sure to ask if

my response doesn't answer your question.

The open pipe produces only the harmonics that occur with a sequence of nodes and antinodes

which includes antinodes at both ends. The wavelengths are the same as for a string of the

same length, having nodes at both ends.

The closed pipe produces only the harmonics which have a node at the closed end and an

antinode at the open end. The resulting sequence of possible wavelengths is therefore

different than for an open pipe.<

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique Rating:Ok

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Question: `q **** gen phy what are beats?

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Your solution:

Beats is a reasult of what happens when two sounds have a closer frequecy.

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`a** Beats are what happens when the two sounds are close in frequency. Beats occur when the

combined sound gets louder then quieter then louder etc. with a frequency equal to the

differences of the frequencies of the two sounds. **

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique Rating:Ok

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Question: `q **** query univ phy 16.66 / 16.62 11th edition16.54 (20.32 10th edition) steel

rod 1.5 m why hold only at middle to get fund? freq of fund? freq of 1st overtone and where

held? **** why can the rod be held only at middle to get the fundamental?

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Your solution:

Since the sequence is based by the ANA so inorder to absorb the energy of the vibration we

would have to hold at the centre where there is a node.

Since 1/2 wavelength is 1.5m then the wavelength would equal to 3m and therefor the velocity

=5941m/s

then (5941m/s)/(3m)=1980Hz

v/(2/2)L=3961Hz

That is received by holding the rod at the end and are free to vibrate

@&

Holding the rod at the end will damp out all oscillations.

*@

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`aSTUDENT SOLUTION WITH INSTRUCTOR COMMENTS:

Since the rod is a rigid body it can form the smallest frequency corresponding to the largest

wavelength only when held at the center. The smallest frequency corresponding to the largest

wavelength is known as the fundamental.

(a) the fingers act as a sort of pivot and the bar performs a teeter - totter motion on either

side of the pivot **note: the motion is more like the flapping of a bird's wings, though it

obviously doesn't result from the same sort of muscular action but rather from an elastic

response to a disturbance, and the motion attenuates over time**. With this manner of motion,

the ends have the greatest amount of amplitude, thus making them the antinodes.

(b)Holding the rod at any point other than the center changes the wavelngth of the first

harmonic causing one end of the rod to have a smaller wave motion than the other. Since the

fundamental frequency is in essence the smallest frequency corresponding to the largest

wavelength, offsetting Lwould produce an unappropriatley sized wavelength.

(c)Fundamental frequency of a steel rod:

( 5941 m /s) / [(2/1)(1.5m) = 1980.33Hz

(d) v / (2/2) L = 3960.67Hz --achieved by holding the rod on one end.

INSTRUCTOR COMMENTS:

The ends of the rod are free so it can vibrate in any mode for which the ends are antinodes.

The greatest possible wavelength is the one for which the ends are antinodes and the middle is

a node (form ANA). Since any place the rod is held must be a node (your hand would quickly

absorb the energy of the vibration if there was any wave-associated particle motion at that

point) this ANA configuration is possible only if you hold the rod at the middle.

Since a node-antinode distance corresponds to 1/4 wavelength the ANA configuration consists of

1/2 wavelength. So 1/2 wavelength is 1.5 m and the wavelength is 3 m.

At propagation velocity 5941 m/s the 3 m wavelength implies a frequency of 5941 m/s / (3 m) =

1980 cycles/sec or 1980 Hz, approx..

The first overtone occurs with antinodes at the ends and node-antinode-node between, so the

configuration is ANANA. This corresponds to 4 quarter-wavelengths, or a full wavelength. The

resulting wavelength is 1.5 m and the frequency is about 3760 Hz.

THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION MIGHT OR MIGHT NOT BE RELATED TO THIS PROBLEM:

STUDENT RESPONSES WITH INSTRUCTOR COMMENTS INSERTED

To find the amplitudes at 40, 20 and 10 cm from the left end:

The amplitudes are:

at 40 cm 0

at 20 cm .004m

at 10 cm .002828 m

I obtained my results by using the information in the problem to write the equation of the

standing wave. Since the cosine function is maximum at 0, I substituted t=0 into the equation

and the value of x that I wanted to find the amplitude for.

** wavelength = 192 m/2 / (240 Hz) = .8 m.

Amplitude at x is .4 cm sin(2 `pi x / .8 m) **the maximum transverse velocity and acceleration

at each of these points are found from the equation of motion:

`omega = 2 `pi rad * 240 cycles / sec = 480 `pi rad/s.

.004 m * 480 `pi rad/s = 6 m/s approx and .004 m * ( 480 `pi rad/s)^2 = 9000 m/s^2, approx.

.0028 m * 480 `pi rad/s = 4 m/s approx and .0028 m * ( 480 `pi rad/s)^2 = 6432 m/s^2, approx.

**

STUDENT COMMENT

The last student response was very interesting. If I understand it correctly, she took the

standing

wave equation and found the max by setting the derivative equal to zero.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

That is a very good statement of the reasoning illustrated in the student's solution.

The time derivative of the position function is the velocity function for the particles of

material, and if the particles at the point where you hold the bar isn't zero, energy will be

lost at that point very quickly, causing the standing wave to dissipate its energy (or to

retain too little energy to to form in the first place).

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Self-critique (if necessary):

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Self-critique Rating:Ok"

&#Good responses. See my notes and let me know if you have questions. &#