+ All Categories
Home > Documents > What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass...

What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass...

Date post: 21-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: jasmin-stafford
View: 213 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
15
What happens when two wave pulses collide?
Transcript
Page 1: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

What happens when two wave pulses collide?

Page 2: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

• Interference– Two waves “collide,” but pass through each

other undamaged– Superposition Principle: when waves interfere

with each other, the resulting wave is the sum of their amplitude at each point.

Page 3: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Destructive Interference

Page 4: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Constructive Interference

Page 5: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.
Page 6: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.
Page 7: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Constructive Interference

• crests aligned with crests

• waves are “out of phase”

Page 8: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Destructive Interference

• crests aligned with troughs

• waves are “out of phase”

Page 9: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.
Page 10: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

• Interference– Add the amplitudes of the waves• Above axis is positive, below is negative

– The result is the superposition of the waves– Constructive wave gets bigger– Destructive wave gets smaller

Page 11: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

What if we send a bunch of pulses down the spring and let them reflect back? How will they interfere with one another?

Page 12: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Standing waves

Animation

Page 13: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Parts of a Wave

2 4 6 x(m)

3

-3y(m)

Crest/antinode

Trough/antinode

node

Page 14: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

Wave Parameters

3

-3

2 4 6 x(m)

y(m)

amplitude

wavelength

wavelength

Page 15: What happens when two wave pulses collide?. Interference – Two waves “collide,” but pass through each other undamaged – Superposition Principle: when.

• You can make a standing wave on a spring. – Figure out how to make different standing

waves.– What would a graph of wavelength vs. # of

antinodes look like?– Collect the data to make this graph.

Wav

elen

gth

# of antinodes


Recommended