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Adv Physics

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Title: Adv Physics


1
Adv Physics
  • Chapter 14
  • Sections 3 and 5

2
Doppler Effect
  • How does the speed of the source effect your
    results?
  • http//www.upscale.utoronto.ca/GeneralInterest/Har
    rison/Flash/ClassMechanics/DopplerWaveFronts/Doppl
    erWaveFronts.swf

3
Doppler Effect
  • What does the wave pattern look like when you are
    traveling just below the speed of the wave?
  • The waves compress in front of you

4
Doppler Effect
  • What does the wave pattern look like when you are
    traveling at the speed of the wave?
  • The waves in front of you compress into a single
    wave front
  • In terms of sound you have created a region with
    a dramatic pressure change
  • - called the sound barrier

5
Doppler Effect
  • What does the wave pattern look like if you are
    traveling faster than the speed of the wave?
  • You out run the waves and a cone-shaped pattern
    is formed
  • -called a shock wave

6
Shock Wave
  • commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileSonic_boom.svg
  • Along the edges of the cone a large pressure
    ridge is formed
  • When the edge of the cone reaches the ear of a
    listener a loud boom is heard
  • -called a sonic boom

7
Sonic Boom
  • Common misconception that sonic boom is heard
    when a plane breaks the sound barrier
  • Sonic boom is heard whenever a listener comes in
    contact with the edge of the shock wave

8
Shock Wave
  • Is possible for a shock wave to break windows and
    cause damage to structures
  • Pilots are instructed to fly supersonically at
    high altitudes and away from populated areas

9
Intensity
  • How a wave spreads its power over an area
  • -power divided by the cross-sectional area
    perpendicular to the direction of wave motion
  • I P/A where I intensity
  • P power
  • A cross sectional area
  • I W/m2

10
Sample Problem
  • Suppose 12 x 10-5 W of power pass perpendicularly
    through 2 surfaces having areas of 4 m2 and 12
    m2. Find the sound intensity at each surface.

11
Range of Intensities
  • Threshold of hearing smallest intensity the
    human ear can detect
  • I0 12 x 10-5 W/m2 at 1000 Hz
  • Threshold of pain intensity that is so large
    that it causes the human ear actually pain, 1
    W/m2

12
Sample Problem
  • During a fireworks display a rocket explodes high
    in the air. Sound spreads out uniformly. When
    the sound reaches a listener 640 m away the sound
    has an intensity of 0.1 W/m2. What is the
    intensity detected by a listener 160 m away?

13
Intensity Level
  • Measure of the intensity of sound relative to a
    reference intensity using the logarithmic scale
  • ß 10 log (I /I0)
  • where ß intensity level
  • I intensity
  • I0 reference intensity (usually
    threshold
  • of hearing)
  • ß decibels, dB

14
Notes about Decibels
  • Threshold of hearing is 0 dB
  • Threshold of pain is 120 dB
  • 0 dB doesnt mean no sound it means the sound
    has the same intensity as the threshold of
    hearing
  • Doubling the intensity doesnt double the
    loudness (takes 10 dB increase to do that)
  • 1 dB change is the smallest change in loudness
    detectable

15
Decibels
  • http//www.nidcd.nih.gov/staticresources/health/ed
    ucation/decibel/decible4.swf
  • Sound levels of 90 dB and above will damage
    receptor nerves in the ear resulting in a loss of
    hearing

16
Sample Problem
  • Two people talk simultaneously. If the intensity
    level is 60 dB when either one speaks alone, what
    is the intensity level when both speak at once?

17
Sample Problem
  • When a 100 dB sound wave comes through an open
    window of area 0.5 m2, how much acoustic energy
    passes through the window in a 10 min interval?
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