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Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

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Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics
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Page 1: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Sound Notes

Chatfield Senior High

Department of Physics

Page 2: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Sound is a Wave

It is a longitudinal

(1-D) wave

Page 3: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Properties of Sound

Transmission-sound goes through a material

Reflection- waves bounce off at the same angle it was received

Absorption- waves are blocked by a substance (opposite of transmission)

Page 4: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Transmission in space?

Sound requires a medium to travel

Page 5: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Speed of Sound

It is variable based upon temperature and density of the material

Approximate values of speed of sound Air (00-) 330 m/s Air (25o) 343 m/s Water-1440 m/s Glass-4550 m/s Iron and Steel- 5000m/s

Page 6: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Lab 1- Verifying frequency of a tuning fork

Determine period of wave by averaging 10 wavefronts as below and then use f=1/T to

verify frequency

Page 7: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

FFT Curve

Page 8: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Lab 2-Sound through echo

Find distance of the tube and double it (why?) Use v=d/t to determine the speed of sound in

air.

Page 9: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Lab 3-Finding Resonance of Tube Find frequency where sound rings out The sound is reflecting off the water and

therefore creates a closed ended tube The is basically a quarter of a wavelength

(why?)

Page 10: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Resonance in Sound

Wavelengths that have the same amplitude and frequency that result in an increase of amplitude

Page 11: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Closed Ended Tube (Pipe organ)

Page 12: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Open-Ended Tubes and Strings(Organ / Guitar String) (1/2

Page 13: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

The decibel

A logarithmic scale that shows the loudness of soundL=10 A A= log L

Table of valuesThreshold of hearing- 0 dBWhisper-20 dBLibrary-40 dBRefrigerator-45 dBRestaurant- 50 dBOrdinary Conversation-65 dBBusy Traffic- 70 dBScreaming Child- 90 dBiPod at Maximum Volume-108 dBCSH Fire Alarm-115 dBThreshold of Pain-120 dBJet Airplane-140 dB

Page 14: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Frequencies of Sound

The human ear hears sound from the range from 20-20000 Hz

We hear sounds the best from 1000-5000 Hz

Page 15: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Frequencies of Music

Page 16: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Range of Audibility of the Human Ear

Page 17: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Ultrasound (Frequencies above human hearing)

Page 18: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Beats

Two waves constructively interfering whose frequencies are above or below each other

Page 19: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

The Ear

Page 20: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Function of the Ear’s parts

Outer ear-pinna-collects sound Middle ear-transmits vibrations to the

inner ear Inner ear-fluid transmitted to hair cells

that have nerve endings (also used for balance)

Page 21: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Doppler Effect

When an object is moving toward the observer the pitch is higher

When an object is moving away from the observer the pitch is lower

Page 22: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Sonic Boom

Page 23: Sound Notes Chatfield Senior High Department of Physics.

Sound and Music

Most pure…the Blue Man Group


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