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Interference of Waves Chapter 18

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Title: Interference of Waves Chapter 18


1
Interference of Waves Chapter 18
  • PHYS 2326-26

2
Concepts to Know
  • Boundary Conditions
  • Principle of Superposition
  • Standing Waves
  • Traveling Waves
  • Nodes
  • Antinodes
  • Interference
  • Destructive Interference

3
Concepts to Know
  • Constructive Interference
  • Normal Modes
  • Fundamental Frequency
  • Overtones
  • Harmonics
  • Fourier Analysis (Harmonic Analysis)
  • Open Pipe
  • Closed Pipe
  • Resonance

4
Waves and Particles
  • Are very different
  • Particles 0 size, waves have a size
    wavelength
  • Particles must be at different locations while
    multiple waves can be at the same place
  • Bound waves (waves with boundaries) only allow
    discrete frequencies

5
Superposition Principle
  • If two or more waves are moving through a medium,
    the resultant value of the wave function at any
    point is the algebraic sum of the values of the
    wave functions of the individual waves
  • Waves that obey this principle are linear waves.
    Those that dont are nonlinear waves. Usually
    the difference is the amplitude being large
    compared to their wavelength

6
Superposition
  • Consequence two traveling waves can pass
    through each other without being destroyed or
    altered

7
Interference
  • The combination of separate waves in the same
    region of space to produce a resultant wave is
    called INTERFERENCE

8
Constructive Interference
  • Occurs when waves or pulses combine to create a
    resultant pulse which is greater than either of
    the individual pulses
  • Constructive interference occurs when path
    difference is an integer multiple of wavelength
    so the signal adds because the phase of the
    signals combining is 0

9
Destructive Interference
  • Occurs when the amplitude of the resultant wave
    is less than either wave
  • Destructive interference occurs when the
    difference in pathlength for a signal is an odd
    integer multiplier of a half wavelength
  • so that the waves arrive 180 degrees out of phase

10
Phase
  • The difference in phase between two tones of the
    same frequency arriving from slightly different
    paths is ?? 2p ?x/?
  • If two speakers are driven by the same source
    there will be a difference in phase associated
    with the difference in distance and will depend
    upon the wavelength

11
Standing WavesChapter 18.2
  • Given two waves, one going left, the other going
    right, we have

12
Standing Waves
  • Note the equation for the standing wave doesnt
    have (kx-?t) so it is not a traveling wave
  • It is an oscillation pattern with a stationary
    outline
  • 2Asinkx is an amplitude that varies with position
  • cos?t is simple harmonic motion oscillating at an
    angular frequency ?

13
Nodes Antinodes
  • Notice that has
    points where the amplitude is 0, kx0,p, 2p, 3p
    and remember that k 2 p/? For x0, ?/2, 3
    ?/2, n?/2, n 0,1,2,3,
  • These are NODES
  • In between these nodes are points where 2Asinkx
    are maximum( sine /- 1). These occur at kx
    p/2, 3 p/2, 5 p/2, so that x ?/4, 3 ?/4, 5
    ?/4, n ?/4 for n1,3,5,
  • These are called ANTINODES

14
Nodes Antinodes
  • Distance between adjacent antinodes ?/2
  • Distance between adjacent nodes ?/2
  • Distance between a node and an antinode ?/4

15
Standing Waves on Fixed String
  • possible wavelengths ?n 2L/n
  • fn v/ ?n n v/2L n1,2,3,
  • these are quantized freq.
  • since v sqrt(T/µ)
  • fn (n/2L)sqrt(T/µ)
  • Fundamental or first harmonic
  • f1 (1/2L)sqrt(T/µ)
  • fn n f1

A
N
N
L1? /2
n1
A
A
L2? /2
N
N
n2
N
A
A
A
N
N
N
n3
N
L3? /2
L
16
Resonance
  • A system can oscillate in one or more normal
    modes. If a periodic force is applied to the
    system, the amplitude of the resulting motion is
    greatest when the frequency of the applied force
    is equal to one of the natural frequencies of the
    system

17
Periodic Sound WavesChapter 17.2
  • Eqns 17.2 and 17.3 are for the displacement wave
    and the pressure wave
  • These are 90 degrees out of phase with the
    displacement wave being a cosine function and the
    pressure wave being a sine function
  • Pressure variations are a maximum when the
    displacement is 0 and the displacement wave is
    maximum where the pressure is a minimum

18
Air Columns(Pipes)
  • May be open or closed end
  • Closed end pipe is rigid forms a pressure
    antinode
  • An open ended pipe essentially forms a
    displacement antinode (maximum variation) and a
    pressure node

19
  • Open Pipe
  • Fundamental or first harmonic is ½ wavelength
    resonance
  • ?1 2L, f1 v/ ?1 v/2L
  • Second harmonic
  • ?2 L, f2 v/ ?2 v/L 2 f1
  • Third harmonic
  • ?3 2/3 L, f3 3v/2L 3 f1

20
  • Closed Pipe
  • Fundamental or first harmonic is ¼ wave resonant
  • ?1 4L, f1 v/ ?1 v/4L
  • Second harmonic doesnt exist (no even ones)
  • Third harmonic
  • ?3 4/3 L, f3 3v/4L 3 f1
  • Fifth harmonic
  • ?5 4/5 L, f5 5v/4L 5 f1

21
Harmonics Overtones
  • Harmonics are multiples of the fundamental
    frequency
  • Overtones are higher order frequencies above the
    fundamental frequency that are often harmonics
    but not always
  • A harmonic (beyond first) is an overtone
  • An overtone may not be a harmonic (integer
    multiple of the primary frequency)
  • NOTE The first overtone is the 2nd harmonic

22
Example 1
  • A string of mass 100g and length 2m has a tension
    of 200N. What is a) its wave velocity, b) its
    fundamental frequency, c) its 3rd harmonic, d)
    its 5th overtone
  • m0.1kg, µ m/L 0.1/2 0.05 kg/m
  • v sqrt ( F/ µ) sqrt(200/0.05) 63.24m/s
  • L 2 ¼ ? (twice the antinode distance)
  • ? 4m, f1 v/ ? 63.25/4 15.81 Hz
  • c) f3 3f1 3 15.81 47.4 Hz
  • d) ?5o 2 L / 6 0.667 m

23
Example 2
  • Two omni directional speakers located at points
    (0,1) and (0,-2) meters, what is the minimum
    frequency of a sound wave that would produce
    constructive interference at the point (5,0)m.

r1
y1
x
y2
r2
24
  • y11m, y22m, x 5m v345m/s speed of sound in
    air, r1sqrt(x2y12), r2sqrt(x2y22),
    constructive interference occurs at multiples of
    ? so first is at 1 ? which is the difference in
    path lengths r2-r1 1 ?
  • r1 5.099m, r2 5.385m, ? 0.286m
  • f 1206 Hz

25
Fouriers TheoremHarmonic Series
  • Fouriers theorem states that for a periodic
    waveform, it can be represented as closely as
    desired by the combination of a sufficiently
    large number of sinusoidal waves that form a
    harmonic series.

26
Waveforms
  • Sine wave 1 frequency, a pure tone
  • Square wave odd harmonics decreasing in
    amplitude
  • Musical instruments combinations of even and
    odd harmonics that give a characteristic sound to
    the instrument
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