Student's Solutions Manual for College Physics: A Strategic Approach Volume 2 (Chs. 17-30)
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780321908858
Author: Knight (Professor Emeritus), Randall D.; Jones, Brian; Field, Stuart
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 16, Problem 73MSPP
To determine
To find: The harmonic frequencies, if the C were open at one end and closed at the other.
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Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 16 Solutions
Student's Solutions Manual for College Physics: A Strategic Approach Volume 2 (Chs. 17-30)
Ch. 16 - Light can pass easily through water and through...Ch. 16 - Ocean waves are partially reflected from the...Ch. 16 - A string has an abrupt change in linear density at...Ch. 16 - A guitarist finds that the pitch of one of her...Ch. 16 - Certain illnesses inflame your vocal cords,...Ch. 16 - Figure Q16.6 shows a standing wave on a string...Ch. 16 - Figure Q16.7 shows a standing sound wave in a tube...Ch. 16 - A typical flute is about 66 cm long. A piccolo is...Ch. 16 - Some pipes on a pipe organ are open at both ends,...Ch. 16 - A friends voice sounds different over the...
Ch. 16 - Suppose you were to play a trumpet after breathing...Ch. 16 - If you pour liquid in a tall, narrow glass, you...Ch. 16 - When you speak after breathing helium, in which...Ch. 16 - Sopranos can sing notes at very high...Ch. 16 - A synthesizer is a keyboard instrument that can be...Ch. 16 - If a cold gives you a stuffed-up nose, it changes...Ch. 16 - A small boy and a grown woman both speak at...Ch. 16 - At x = 3 cm, what is the earliest time that y will...Ch. 16 - Two sinusoidal waves with the same amplitude A and...Ch. 16 - A student in her physics lab measures the...Ch. 16 - Prob. 23MCQCh. 16 - Resonances of the ear canal lead to increased...Ch. 16 - The frequency of the lowest standing-wave mode on...Ch. 16 - Suppose you pluck a string on a guitar and it...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.11 is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.2 is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of two...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.3a is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.4 is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of two...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.4 is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of two...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.6 is a snapshot graph at t = 0 s of a...Ch. 16 - At t = 0 s, a small upward (positive y) pulse...Ch. 16 - You are holding one end of an elastic cord that is...Ch. 16 - A 2.0-m-long string is fixed at both ends and...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.10 shows a standing wave oscillating at...Ch. 16 - A bass guitar string is 89 cm long with a...Ch. 16 - Prob. 12PCh. 16 - a. What are the three longest wavelengths for...Ch. 16 - A 121-cm-long, 4.00 g string oscillates in its m =...Ch. 16 - Prob. 15PCh. 16 - A violin string has a standard length of 32.8 cm....Ch. 16 - The lowest note on a grand piano has a frequency...Ch. 16 - An experimenter finds that standing waves on a...Ch. 16 - Ocean waves of wavelength 26 m are moving directly...Ch. 16 - Prob. 20PCh. 16 - The contrabassoon is the wind instrument capable...Ch. 16 - Figure P16.22 shows a standing sound wave in an...Ch. 16 - Prob. 23PCh. 16 - An organ pipe is made to play a low note at 27.5...Ch. 16 - The speed of sound in room temperature (20C) air...Ch. 16 - Parasaurolophus was a dinosaur whose...Ch. 16 - A drainage pipe running under a freeway is 30.0 m...Ch. 16 - Some pipe organs create sounds lower than humans...Ch. 16 - Although the vocal tract is quite complicated, we...Ch. 16 - You know that you sound better when you sing in...Ch. 16 - A child has an ear canal that is 1.3 cm long. At...Ch. 16 - When a sound wave travels directly toward a hard...Ch. 16 - The first formant of your vocal system can be...Ch. 16 - When you voice the vowel sound in hat, you narrow...Ch. 16 - The first and second formants when you make an ee...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers in a 20C room emit 686 Hz sound...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers emit sound waves along the...Ch. 16 - In noisy factory environments, its possible to use...Ch. 16 - Two identical loudspeakers separated by distance d...Ch. 16 - Two identical loudspeakers 2.0 m apart are...Ch. 16 - Prob. 42PCh. 16 - Musicians can use beats to tune their instruments....Ch. 16 - A student waiting at a stoplight notices that her...Ch. 16 - Two strings are adjusted to vibrate at exactly 200...Ch. 16 - A childs train whistle replicates a classic...Ch. 16 - A flute player hears four beats per second when...Ch. 16 - Prob. 48GPCh. 16 - In addition to producing images, ultrasound can be...Ch. 16 - An 80-cm-long steel string with a linear density...Ch. 16 - Tendons are, essentially, elastic cords stretched...Ch. 16 - A string, stretched between two fixed posts, forms...Ch. 16 - Spiders may tune strands of their webs to give...Ch. 16 - Prob. 54GPCh. 16 - Prob. 55GPCh. 16 - Lake Erie is prone to remarkable seichesstanding...Ch. 16 - Prob. 57GPCh. 16 - Prob. 58GPCh. 16 - A 40-cm-long tube has a 40-cm-long insert that can...Ch. 16 - The width of a particular microwave oven is...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers located along the x-axis as shown...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers 42.0 m apart and facing each...Ch. 16 - You are standing 2.50 m directly in front of one...Ch. 16 - Two loudspeakers, 4.0 m apart and facing each...Ch. 16 - Piano tuners tune pianos by listening to the beats...Ch. 16 - A flutist assembles her flute in a room where the...Ch. 16 - A Doppler blood flowmeter emits ultrasound at a...Ch. 16 - An ultrasound unit is being used to measure a...Ch. 16 - Prob. 70MSPPCh. 16 - Prob. 71MSPPCh. 16 - Prob. 72MSPPCh. 16 - Prob. 73MSPP
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- Why is the following situation impossible? Two identical loudspeakers are driven by the same oscillator at frequency 200 Hz. They are located on the ground a distance d = 4.00 m from each other. Starting far from the speakers, a man walks straight toward the right-hand speaker as shown in Figure P17.4. After passing through three minima in sound intensity, he walks to the next maximum and stops. Ignore any sound reflection from the ground. Figure P17.4arrow_forwardA barrel organ is shown in Figure P18.38. Such organs are much smaller than traditional organs, allowing them to fit in smaller spaces and even allowing them to be portable. Use the photo to estimate the range in fundamental frequencies produced by the organ pipes in such an instrument. Assume the pipes are open at both ends. How does that range compare to a piano whose strings range in fundamental frequency from 21.7 Hz to 4186.0 Hz? FIGURE P18.38arrow_forwardTwo speakers are driven by the same oscillator of frequency f. They are located a distance d from each other on a vertical pole. A man walks straight toward the lower speaker in a direction perpendicular to the pole as shown in Figure P17.42. (a) How many times will he hear a minimum in sound intensity? (b) How far is he from the pole at these moments? Let v represent the speed of sound and assume that the ground does not reflect sound. The mans ears are at the same level as the lower speaker. Figure P17.42arrow_forward
- (a) Find the length of an organ pipe closed at one end that produces a fundamental frequency of 256 Hz when air temperature is 18.0°C. (b) What is its fundamental frequency at 25.0°C?arrow_forwardThe sinusoidal wave shown in Figure P13.41 is traveling in the positive x-direction and has a frequency of 18.0 Hz. Find the (a) amplitude, (b) wavelength, (c) period, and (d) speed of the wave. Figure P13.41arrow_forwardThe sinusoidal wave shown in Figure P13.41 is traveling in the positive x-direction and has a frequency of 18.0 Hz. Find the (a) amplitude, (b) wavelength, (c) period, and (d) speed of the wave. Figure P13.41arrow_forward
- A trumpet creates a sound intensity level of 1.15 102 dB at a distance of 1.00 m. (a) What is the sound intensity of a trumpet at this distance? (b) What is the sound intensity of five trumpets at this distance? (c) Find the sound intensity of five trumpets at the location of the first row of an audience, 8.00 m away, assuming, for simplicity, the sound energy propagates uniformly in all directions. (d) Calculate the decibel level of the five trumpets in the first row. (e) If the trumpets are being played in an outdoor auditorium, how far away, in theory, can their combined sound be heard? (f) In practice such a sound could not be heard once the listener was 2-3 km away. Why cant the sound be heard at the distance found in part (e)? Hint: In a very quiet room the ambient sound intensity level is about 30 dB.arrow_forwardA dolphin (Fig. P17.7) in seawater at a temperature of 25C emits a sound wave directed toward the ocean floor 150 m below. How much time passes before it hears an echo?arrow_forwardUltrasound is used in medicine both for diagnostic imaging (Fig. P17.9, page 526) and for therapy. For diagnosis, short pulses of ultrasound are passed through the patients body. An echo reflected from a structure of interest is recorded, and the distance to the structure can be determined from the time delay for the echos return. To reveal detail, the wavelength of the reflected ultrasound must be small compared to the size of the object reflecting the wave. The speed of ultrasound in human tissue is about 1 500 m/s (nearly the same as the speed of sound in water). (a) What is the wavelength of ultrasound with a frequency of 2.40 MHz? (b) In the whole set of imaging techniques, frequencies in the range 1.00 MHz to 20.0 MHz are used. What is the range of wavelengths corresponding to this range of frequencies?arrow_forward
- (a) You are driving down the highway in your car when a police car sounding its siren overtakes you and passes you. If its frequency at rest is f0, is the frequency you hear while the car is catching up to you higher or lower than f0? (b) What about the frequency you hear after the car has passed you?arrow_forwardEver since seeing Figure 16.22 in the previous chapter, you have been fascinated with the hearing response in humans. You have set up an apparatus that allows you to determine your own threshold of hearing as a function of frequency. After performing the experiment and recording the results, you graph the results, which look like Figure P17.22. You are intrigued by the two dips in the curve at the right-hand side of the graph. You measure carefully and find that the minimum values of these dips occur at 3 800 Hz and 11 500 Hz. Performing some online research, you discover that the outer canal of the human ear can be modeled as an air column open at the outer end and closed at the inner end by the eardrum. You use this information to determine the length of the outer canal in your car. Figure P17.22arrow_forward(a) Students in a physics lab are asked to find the length of an air column in a tube closed at one end that has a fundamental frequency of 256 Hz. They hold the tube vertically and fill it with water to the top, then lower the water while a 256—Hz tuning fork is rung and listen for the first resonance. What is the air temperature if the resonance occurs for a length of 0.336 m? (b) At what length will they observe the second resonance (first overtone)?arrow_forward
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