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The Nature and Behavior of Waves

The Nature and Behavior of Waves. What is a Wave?. W ave – a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space Molecules pass energy to neighboring molecules Waves carry energy WITHOUT transporting matter All waves are produced by something that vibrates

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The Nature and Behavior of Waves

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  1. The Nature and Behavior of Waves

  2. What is a Wave? • Wave – a repeating disturbance or movement that transfers energy through matter or space • Molecules pass energy to neighboring molecules • Waves carry energy WITHOUT transporting matter • All waves are produced by something that vibrates • Examples – sound, light

  3. Waves and Energy • Think of a pebble falling into a pool of water and ripples forming. • The pebble has energy because it is falling. • When the pebble splashes into the pool it transfers its energy to the nearby water. • The energy is then transferred from water molecule to water molecule.

  4. Waves and Matter • Think about a boat on a lake. • The waves bump the boat but they don’t carry the boat along with it as they pass. • The waves don’t even carry the water – they just carry the energy forward.

  5. Mediums • Medium - a material through which a wave travels • Mediums can be solids, liquids, or gases • Waves that can only travel through mediums are called mechanical waves • Not all waves need a medium • Example – light and radio waves can travel through space

  6. Mechanical Waves • Mechanical waves – waves that can travel only through matter • There are two main types of mechanical waves: • Transverse • Compressional

  7. Transverse Waves • Transverse waves – matter in the medium moves back and forth at right angles to the directions that the wave travels • Example – water waves

  8. Compressional Waves • Compressional waves – matter in the medium moves in the same direction that the wave travels • Example – sound waves

  9. Combinations • Some waves are a mixture of transverse and compressional waves. • An example is seismic waves, which move the Earth up and down and side to side.

  10. Wave Properties

  11. The Parts of a Wave • Waves can differ in how much energy they carry and in how fast they travel. • Waves also have other characteristics that make them different from each other.

  12. The Parts of a Wave • A transverse wave has alternating high points called crests and low points called troughs.

  13. The Parts of a Wave • When you make compressional waves in a coiled spring, a compression is a region where the coils are close together. • The coils in the region next to a compression are spread apart, or less dense. This less-dense region of a compressional wave is called a rarefaction.

  14. Wavelength • A wavelength is the distance between one point on a wave and the nearest point just like it. • For transverse waves the wavelength is the distance from crest to crest or trough to trough.

  15. Wavelength • A wavelength in a compressional wave is the distance between two neighboring compressions or two neighboring rarefactions.

  16. Frequency • The frequency of a wave is the number of wavelengths that pass a fixed point each second. • Frequency is expressed in hertz (Hz).

  17. Wavelength is Related to Frequency • As frequency increases, wavelength decreases. • The frequency of a wave is always equal to the rate of vibration of the source that creates it. • If you move the rope up, down, and back up in 1 s, the frequency of the wave you generate is 1 Hz.

  18. Wavelength is Related to Frequency • The speed of a wave depends on the medium it is traveling through. • Sound waves usually travel faster in liquids and solids than they do in gases. • However, light waves travel more slowly in liquid and solids than they do in gases or in empty space. • Sound waves usually travel faster in a material if the temperature of the material is increased.

  19. Calculating Wave Speed • You can calculate the speed of a wave represented by v by multiplying its frequency times its wavelength.

  20. Amplitude and Energy • Amplitude is related to the energy carried by a wave. • The greater the wave’s amplitude is, the more energy the wave carries. • Amplitude is measured differently for compressional and transverse waves.

  21. Amplitude of Compressional Waves • The amplitude of a compressional wave is related to how tightly the medium is pushed together at the compressions. • The denser the medium is at the compressions, the larger its amplitude is and the more energy the wave carries.

  22. Amplitude of Compressional Waves • The closer the coils are in a compression, the farther apart they are in a rarefaction. • So the less dense the medium is at the rarefactions, the more energy the wave carries.

  23. Amplitude of Transverse Waves • The amplitude of any transverse wave is the distance from the crest or trough of the wave to the rest position of the medium.

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