Physics of Everyday Phenomena
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781259894008
Author: W. Thomas Griffith, Juliet Brosing Professor
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 15, Problem 17CQ
To determine
Is waves developed interfere constructively or destructively.
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Physics of Everyday Phenomena
Ch. 15 - A wave pulse is transmitted down a Slinky, but the...Ch. 15 - Waves are traveling in an eastward direction on a...Ch. 15 - If the magnet in the buoy described in everyday...Ch. 15 - What does rectification mean and why is it needed...Ch. 15 - A slowly moving engine bumps into a string of...Ch. 15 - A wave can be propagated on a blanket by holding...Ch. 15 - If you increase the frequency with which you are...Ch. 15 - If you increase the speed of a wave on a Slinky by...Ch. 15 - Is it possible to produce a transverse wave on a...Ch. 15 - At sporting events, the crowd sometimes generates...
Ch. 15 - Is it possible to produce a longitudinal wave on a...Ch. 15 - Suppose we double the mass per unit of length of a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 13CQCh. 15 - Prob. 14CQCh. 15 - Suppose we increase the tension in a rope, keeping...Ch. 15 - Is it possible for two waves traveling in the same...Ch. 15 - Prob. 17CQCh. 15 - Prob. 18CQCh. 15 - We can form standing waves on a rope attached to a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 20CQCh. 15 - Prob. 21CQCh. 15 - If we increase the tension of a guitar string,...Ch. 15 - Prob. 23CQCh. 15 - Prob. 24CQCh. 15 - Is it possible for sound to travel through a steel...Ch. 15 - Prob. 26CQCh. 15 - Prob. 27CQCh. 15 - Prob. 28CQCh. 15 - A band playing on a flat-bed truck is approaching...Ch. 15 - When the sound source is moving relative to the...Ch. 15 - Is it possible for sound waves to travel through a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 32CQCh. 15 - Prob. 33CQCh. 15 - What are we measuring when we perform a harmonic...Ch. 15 - How is the musical interval that we call a fifth...Ch. 15 - Prob. 36CQCh. 15 - Prob. 37CQCh. 15 - Two notes close together on the scale, such as do...Ch. 15 - Suppose that water waves coming into a dock have a...Ch. 15 - Suppose that water waves have a wavelength of 3.8...Ch. 15 - A longitudinal wave on a Slinky has a frequency of...Ch. 15 - Prob. 4ECh. 15 - A wave on a string has a speed of 11.5 m/s and a...Ch. 15 - Prob. 6ECh. 15 - A string with a length of 0.75 m is fixed at both...Ch. 15 - Suppose that the string in exercise 7 is plucked...Ch. 15 - Prob. 9ECh. 15 - What is the frequency of a sound wave with a...Ch. 15 - An organ pipe closed at one end and open at the...Ch. 15 - Suppose we start a major scale on concert A, which...Ch. 15 - If fa on a given scale has a frequency of 348 Hz,...Ch. 15 - Prob. 14ECh. 15 - If do has a frequency of 265 Hz and re a frequency...Ch. 15 - Prob. 16ECh. 15 - Prob. 17ECh. 15 - Prob. 1SPCh. 15 - A guitar string has an overall length of 1.25 m...Ch. 15 - A pipe that is open at both ends will form...Ch. 15 - For standard tuning, concert A is defined to have...Ch. 15 - Using the procedure outlined in section 15.5 where...
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- Two speakers, facing each other and separated by a distance d, each emit a pure tone of the same amplitude A with frequency f. The speed of each of the sound waves is vs. A listener stands between the speakers, a distance x from one of the speakers. a. What frequencies would cause a dead spot (complete destructive interference) at the listeners position? b. If the speakers are separated by 5.00 m with the listener 2.00 m from one of the speakers, what is the lowest frequency for which there is a dead spot? The speed of sound in air is 343 m/s.arrow_forwardIf a piece of ribbon were tied to a stretched string carrying a transverse wave, then how is the ribbon observed to oscillate? (6.2) (a) perpendicular to wave direction (b) parallel to wave direction (c) neither (a) nor (b) (d) both (a) and (b)arrow_forwardHow can you determine that the speed of sound is the same for all frequencies by listening to a band orchestra?arrow_forward
- When a pulse travels on a taut string, does it always invert upon reflection? Explain.arrow_forwardConsider the following wave function in SI units: P(r,t)=(25.0r)sin(1.36r2030t) Explain how this wave function can apply to a wave radiating from a small source, with r being the radial distance from the center of the source to any point outside the source. Give the most detailed description of the wave that you can. Include answers to such questions as the following and give representative values for any quantities that can be evaluated. (a) Does the wave move more toward the right or the left? (b) As it moves away from the source, what happens to its amplitude? (c) Its speed? (d) Its frequency? (e) Its wavelength? (f) Its power? (g) Its intensity?arrow_forwardA trough with dimensions 10.00 meters by 0.10 meters by 0.10 meters is partially filled with water. Smallamplitude surface water waves are produced from both ends of the trough by paddles oscillating in simple harmonic motion. The height of the water waves are modeled with two sinusoidal wave equations, y1(x,t)=0.3msin(4m1x3s1t) and y2(x,t)=0.3mcos(4m1x+3s1t2) . What is the wave function of the resulting wave after the waves reach one another and before they reach the end of the trough (i.e., assume that there are only two waves in the trough and ignore reflections)? Use a spreadsheet to check your results. (Hint: Use the trig identities sin(uv)=sinucosvcosusinv and sin(uv)=sinucosvcosusinvarrow_forward
- A sound wave moves down a cylinder as in Figure 16.17. Show that the pressure variation of the wave is described by P=smax2s2, where s = s(x, t) is given by Equation 16.28.arrow_forwardTwo sinusoidal waves with identical wavelengths and amplitudes travel in opposite directions along a string producing a standing wave. The linear mass density of the string is =0.075 kg/m and the tension in the string is FT=5.00 N. The time interval between instances of total destructive interference is t=0.13 s. What is the wavelength of the waves?arrow_forwardThe distance between two successive peaks of a sinusoidal wave traveling along a string is 2 in. If the frequency of this wave is 4 Hz. what is the speed of the wave? (a) 4 m/s (b) 1 m/s (c) 8 m/s (d) 2 m/s (e) impossible to answer from the information givenarrow_forward
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