a longitudinal wave caused by a vibration (that travels at around 343 m/s)
the amplitude
a dimensionless unit that describes the ratio of two intensities of sound
the phenomenon that occurs when the frequency of a force applied to a system matches the natural frequency of vibration of a system
an observed change in freq when there is relative motion between the source of sound and a listener
the rate of energy flow through a given area
positive integer multiple of the fundamental frequency of a periodic wave;
the frequencies of these standing waves are integer multiples of the fundamental frequency F1
the wavelengths of these standing waves are integer multiples of the fundamental wavelength
infinite series of positive fractions and numbers
sound waves of slightly different freq produce beats; differences between frequencies=number of beats per second
a vibrating object pushes the air molecules against each other which squeezes the molecules closer together (compression). When the object moves in the opposite direction the molecules spread apart (rarefaction). the object continues to vibrate and creates a series of compression and rarefractions.
20Hz-20,000Hz
less than 20Hz
more than 20,000Hz
waves per second
The higher the frequency, the higher the pitch
background noise and loudness
dB=10log ( I/1*10E-12)
the medium
gases, liquids, then solids
the molecules are closest together so they can vibrate into each other much faster
V= distance/time
i = P/ 4 (pie) r (squared)
Spherical wave
Intesity
watts/m (squared)
power
watts
radius/distance from source
meters
meters
loudness
the brain doesn't perceive the sound as twice as loud
logarithmic
increase the intensity by 10x
to describe a sound's relative loudness as perceived by the brain
standing waves that are the superposition of various wavelengths
nodes
the standing waves are only able to occur at specific frequencies
harmonic series
The higher note has twice the frequency of the lower note (higher pitch)
shortens the length of the vibrating portion of the string creating new wavelengths and frequencies for standing waves
double it's length or 2L
it's length times 4 or 4L
Fn= nv / 2L
Fn= nv / 4L
only odd harmonics
there are more harmonics
the pitch goes up
the freq goes up
the pitch goes down
the freq goes down
1V / 2L
1V / 4L
freq
in all directions
the waves arrive more frequently
As an object vibrates, it bumps the molecules around it setting off a chain reaction of molecules vibrating and bumping into each other creating a series of compressions (particles closest together) and rarefactions that travel creating a sound wave.
power
divides by 4
it's natural freq
even though when you hear a loud machine it doesn't physically hurt, the vibrations can cause damage to your hearing.
the lowest freq of vibration a sound source can produce (F1)
the fund freq cuts in half
you multiply the fun freq by the harmonic number
Eddies the wind blowing past the bridge caused periodic upward gusting. The gusting was near the bridge's natural freq so the amp increased greatly. The increased amp was too much for the bridge and it collapsed.
the cadence could be the same as the bridge which could cause a harmonic motion with a large amp.
- vibrations of air can't be changed like strings can