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Unit 5, Chapter 15

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CPO Science Foundations of Physics Unit 5, Chapter 15 Unit 5: Waves and Sound 15.1 Properties of Sound 15.2 Sound Waves 15.3 Sound, Perception, and Music Chapter 15 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 5, Chapter 15


1
Unit 5, Chapter 15
CPO Science Foundations of Physics
2
Unit 5 Waves and Sound
Chapter 15 Sound
  • 15.1 Properties of Sound
  • 15.2 Sound Waves
  • 15.3 Sound, Perception, and Music

3
Chapter 15 Objectives
  • Explain how the pitch, loudness, and speed of
    sound are related to properties of waves.
  • Describe how sound is created and recorded.
  • Give examples of refraction, diffraction,
    absorption, and reflection of sound waves.
  • Explain the Doppler effect.
  • Give a practical example of resonance with sound
    waves.
  • Explain the relationship between the
    superposition principle and Fouriers theorem.
  • Describe how the meaning of sound is related to
    frequency and time.
  • Describe the musical scale, consonance,
    dissonance, and beats in terms of sound waves.

4
Chapter 15 Vocabulary Terms
  • pressure
  • frequency
  • pitch
  • superposition principle
  • decibel
  • speaker
  • acoustics
  • microphone
  • fundamental
  • wavelength
  • stereo
  • Doppler effect
  • supersonic frequency
  • spectrum
  • shock wave
  • resonance
  • node
  • antinode
  • dissonance
  • harmonic
  • reverberation
  • note
  • sonogram
  • Fouriers theorem
  • rhythm
  • musical scale
  • cochlea
  • consonance
  • longitudinal wave
  • beats
  • octave

5
15.1 Properties of Sound
  • Key Question
  • What is sound and how do we hear it?

Students read Section 15.1 AFTER Investigation
15.1
6
15.1 Properties of Sound
  • If you could see the atoms, the difference
    between high and low pressure is not as great.
    Here, it is exaggerated.

7
15.2 The frequency of sound
  • We hear frequencies of sound as having different
    pitch.
  • A low frequency sound has a low pitch, like the
    rumble of a big truck.
  • A high-frequency sound has a high pitch, like a
    whistle or siren.
  • In speech, women have higher fundamental
    frequencies than men.

8
15.1 Complex sound
9
Common Sounds and their Loudness
10
15.1 Loudness
  • Every increase of 20 dB, means the pressure wave
    is 10 times greater in amplitude.

11
15.1 Sensitivity of the ear
  • How we hear the loudness of sound is affected by
    the frequency of the sound as well as by the
    amplitude.
  • The human ear is most sensitive to sounds between
    300 and 3,000 Hz.
  • The ear is less sensitive to sounds outside this
    range.
  • Most of the frequencies that make up speech are
    between 300 and 3,000 Hz.

12
15.1 How sound is created
  • The human voice is a complex sound that starts in
    the larynx, a small structure at the top of your
    windpipe.
  • The sound that starts in the larynx is changed by
    passing through openings in the throat and mouth.
  • Different sounds are made by changing both the
    vibrations in the larynx and the shape of the
    openings.

13
15.1 Recording sound
  • A common way to record sound starts with a
    microphone. A microphone transforms a sound wave
    into an electrical signal with the same pattern
    of oscillation.

14
15.1 Recording sound
  • In modern digital recording, a sensitive circuit
    converts analog sounds to digital values between
    0 and 65,536.

15
15.1 Recording sound
  • Numbers correspond to the amplitude of the signal
    and are recorded as data. One second of
    compact-disk-quality sound is a list of 44,100
    numbers.

16
15.1 Recording sound
  • To play the sound back, the string of numbers is
    read by a laser and converted into electrical
    signals again by a second circuit which reverses
    the process of the previous circuit.

17
15.1 Recording sound
  • The electrical signal is amplified until it is
    powerful enough to move the coil in a speaker and
    reproduce the sound.

18
15.2 Sound Waves
  • Key Question
  • Does sound behave like other waves?

Students read Section 15.2 BEFORE Investigation
15.2
19
15.2 Sound Waves
  • Sound has both frequency (that we hear directly)
    and wavelength (demonstrated by simple
    experiments).
  • The speed of sound is frequency times wavelength.
  • Resonance happens with sound.
  • Sound can be reflected, refracted, and absorbed
    and also shows evidence of interference and
    diffraction.

20
15.2 Sound Waves
  • A sound wave is a wave of alternating
    high-pressure and low-pressure regions of air.

21
15.2 The wavelength of sound
22
15.2 The Doppler effect
  • The shift in frequency caused by motion is called
    the Doppler effect.
  • It occurs when a sound source is moving at speeds
    less than the speed of sound.

23
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24
15.2 The speed of sound
  • The speed of sound in air is 343 meters per
    second (660 miles per hour) at one atmosphere of
    pressure and room temperature (21C).
  • An object is subsonic when it is moving slower
    than sound.

25
15.2 The speed of sound
  • We use the term supersonic to describe motion at
    speeds faster than the speed of sound.
  • A shock wave forms where the wave fronts pile up.
  • The pressure change across the shock wave is what
    causes a very loud sound known as a sonic boom.

26
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27
15.2 Standing waves and resonance
  • Spaces enclosed by boundaries can create
    resonance with sound waves.
  • The closed end of a pipe is a closed boundary.
  • An open boundary makes an antinode in the
    standing wave.
  • Sounds of different frequencies are made by
    standing waves.
  • A particular sound is selected by designing the
    length of a vibrating system to be resonant at
    the desired frequency.

28
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29
15.2 Sound waves and boundaries
  • Like other waves, sound waves can be reflected by
    surfaces and refracted as they pass from one
    material to another.
  • Sound waves reflect from hard surfaces.
  • Soft materials can absorb sound waves.

30
15.2 Fourier's theorem
  • Fouriers theorem says any complex wave can be
    made from a sum of single frequency waves.

31
15.2 Sound spectrum
  • A complex wave is really a sum of component
    frequencies.
  • A frequency spectrum is a graph that shows the
    amplitude of each component frequency in a
    complex wave.

32
15.3 Sound, Perception, and Music
  • Key Question
  • How is musical sound different than other types
    of sound?

Students read Section 15.3 AFTER Investigation
15.3
33
15.3 Sound, Perception, and Music
  • A single frequency by itself does not have much
    meaning.
  • The meaning comes from patterns in many
    frequencies together.
  • A sonogram is a special kind of graph that shows
    how loud sound is at different frequencies.
  • Every persons sonogram is different, even when
    saying the same word.

34
15.3 Hearing sound
  • The eardrum vibrates in response to sound waves
    in the ear canal.
  • The three delicate bones of the inner ear
    transmit the vibration of the eardrum to the side
    of the cochlea.
  • The fluid in the spiral of the cochlea vibrates
    and creates waves that travel up the spiral.

35
15.3 Sound
  • The nerves near the beginning see a relatively
    large channel and respond to longer wavelength,
    low frequency sound.
  • The nerves at the small end of the channel
    respond to shorter wavelength, higher-frequency
    sound.

36
15.3 Music
  • The pitch of a sound is how high or low we hear
    its frequency. Though pitch and frequency usually
    mean the same thing, the way we hear a pitch can
    be affected by the sounds we heard before and
    after.
  • Rhythm is a regular time pattern in a sound.
  • Music is a combination of sound and rhythm that
    we find pleasant.
  • Most of the music you listen to is created from a
    pattern of frequencies called a musical scale.

37
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38
15.3 Consonance, dissonance, and beats
  • Harmony is the study of how sounds work together
    to create effects desired by the composer.
  • When we hear more than one frequency of sound and
    the combination sounds good, we call it
    consonance.
  • When the combination sounds bad or unsettling, we
    call it dissonance.

39
15.3 Consonance, dissonance, and beats
  • Consonance and dissonance are related to beats.
  • When frequencies are far enough apart that there
    are no beats, we get consonance.
  • When frequencies are too close together, we hear
    beats that are the cause of dissonance.
  • Beats occur when two frequencies are close, but
    not exactly the same.

40
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41
15.3 Harmonics and instruments
  • The same note sounds different when played on
    different instruments because the sound from an
    instrument is not a single pure frequency.
  • The variation comes from the harmonics, multiples
    of the fundamental note.

42
Application Sound from a Guitar
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