Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9781305116399
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Textbook Question
Chapter 37, Problem 37.46AP
A room is 6.0 m long and 3.0 m wide. At the front of the room, along one of the 3.0-m-wide walls, two loudspeakers are set 1.0 m apart, with the center point between them coinciding with the center point of the wall. The speakers emit a sound wave of a single frequency and a maximum in sound intensity is heard at the center of the back wall, 6.0 m from the speakers. What is the highest possible frequency of the sound from the speakers if no other maxima are heard anywhere along the back wall?
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Two in-phase loudspeakers are placed 6.00 m apart along one wall of a room. They emit sound with a frequency of 512Hz. Starting at the location of one of the loudspeakers, a microphone is moved in a direction perpendicular to the wall until constructive interference is detected for the first time. How far is the microphone from the wall at that point? The speed of sound in air is 330 m/s.
a) 0.203 m
b) 0.282 m
c) 0.664 m
d) 0.138 m
0.141 m
Two small speakers, 0.610 m apart, are facing in the same direction. They are driven by one 685 Hz oscillator and therefore emit identical sound waves in phase with one another at the respective points of origin. (The speed of sound waves in air is 343 m/s.)
Two speakers are side by side, with one speaker on the left and one on the right. The speakers are separated by a distance d and emit sound waves in the same direction. A man stands directly in front of the speaker on the right but a distance x away from the right speaker.
(a)
A listener wishes to stand in front of one of the speakers, at the closest point (i.e., smallest x-value) where intensity is at a relative maximum. At what distance x from the nearest speaker should he position himself? (Enter your answer in m.)
m
(b)
The listener now wishes to stand at the closest point along that line where intensity is at a relative minimum. At what distance x should he position himself now? (Enter your answer in m.)
m
The following two lists give the diameters and sound frequencies for three loudspeakers. Pair each diameter with a frequency, so that the diffraction angle is the same for each of the speakers, and then find the common diffraction angle. Take the speed of sound to be 343 m/s.
Diameter, D
Frequency, f
0.07 m
5 kHz
0.35 m
10 kHz
0.14 m
2 kHz
θ = Number
Chapter 37 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology Update (No access codes included)
Ch. 37 - Which of the following causes the fringes in a...Ch. 37 - Using Figure 36.6 as a model, sketch the...Ch. 37 - One microscope slide is placed on top of another...Ch. 37 - While using a Michelson interferometer (shown in...Ch. 37 - Four trials of Young's double-slit experiment are...Ch. 37 - Suppose Youngs double-slit experiment is performed...Ch. 37 - Green light has a wavelength of 500 nm in air. (i)...Ch. 37 - A thin layer of oil (n = 1.25) is floating on...Ch. 37 - A monochromatic beam of light of wavelength .500...Ch. 37 - According to Table 35.1, the index of refraction...
Ch. 37 - Suppose you perform Youngs double-slit experiment...Ch. 37 - A plane monochromatic light wave is incident on a...Ch. 37 - A film of' oil on a puddle in a parking lot shows...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.1CQCh. 37 - Prob. 37.2CQCh. 37 - Explain why two flashlights held close together do...Ch. 37 - A lens with outer radius of curvature R and index...Ch. 37 - Consider a dark fringe in a double-slit...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.6CQCh. 37 - What is the necessary condition on the path length...Ch. 37 - In a laboratory accident, you spill two liquids...Ch. 37 - A theatrical smoke machine fills the space bet...Ch. 37 - Two slits are separated by 0.320 mm. A beam of...Ch. 37 - Light of wavelength 530 nm illuminates a pair of...Ch. 37 - A laser beam is incident on two slits with a...Ch. 37 - A Youngs interference experiment is performed with...Ch. 37 - Youngs double-slit experiment is performed with...Ch. 37 - Why is the following situation impossible? Two...Ch. 37 - Light of wavelength 620 nm falls on a double slit,...Ch. 37 - In a Youngs double-slit experiment, two parallel...Ch. 37 - pair of narrow, parallel slits separated by 0.250...Ch. 37 - Light with wavelength 442 nm passes through a...Ch. 37 - The two speakers of a boom box are 35.0 cm apart....Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.12PCh. 37 - Two radio antennas separated by d = 300 in as...Ch. 37 - A riverside warehouse has several small doors...Ch. 37 - A student holds a laser that emits light of...Ch. 37 - A student holds a laser that emits light of...Ch. 37 - Radio waves of wavelength 125 m from a galaxy...Ch. 37 - In Figure P36.10 (not to scale), let L = 1.20 m...Ch. 37 - Coherent light rays of wavelength strike a pair...Ch. 37 - Monochromatic light of wavelength is incident on...Ch. 37 - In the double-slit arrangement of Figure P36.13, d...Ch. 37 - Youngs double-slit experiment underlies the...Ch. 37 - Two slits are separated by 0.180 mm. An...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.24PCh. 37 - In Figure P37.18, let L = 120 cm and d = 0.250 cm....Ch. 37 - Monochromatic coherent light of amplitude E0 and...Ch. 37 - The intensity on the screen at a certain point in...Ch. 37 - Green light ( = 546 nm) illuminates a pair of...Ch. 37 - Two narrow, parallel slits separated by 0.850 mm...Ch. 37 - A soap bubble (n = 1.33) floating in air has the...Ch. 37 - A thin film of oil (n = 1.25) is located on...Ch. 37 - A material having an index of refraction of 1.30...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.33PCh. 37 - A film of MgF2 (n = 1.38) having thickness 1.00 ...Ch. 37 - A beam of 580-nm light passes through two closely...Ch. 37 - An oil film (n = 1.45) floating on water is...Ch. 37 - An air wedge is formed between two glass plates...Ch. 37 - Astronomers observe the chromosphere of the Sun...Ch. 37 - When a liquid is introduced into the air space...Ch. 37 - A lens made of glass (ng = 1.52) is coated with a...Ch. 37 - Two glass plates 10.0 cm long are in contact at...Ch. 37 - Mirror M1 in Figure 36.13 is moved through a...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.43PCh. 37 - One leg of a Michelson interferometer contains an...Ch. 37 - Radio transmitter A operating at 60.0 MHz is 10.0...Ch. 37 - A room is 6.0 m long and 3.0 m wide. At the front...Ch. 37 - In an experiment similar to that of Example 36.1,...Ch. 37 - In the What If? section of Example 36.2, it was...Ch. 37 - An investigator finds a fiber at a crime scene...Ch. 37 - Raise your hand and hold it flat. Think of the...Ch. 37 - Two coherent waves, coming from sources at...Ch. 37 - In a Youngs interference experiment, the two slits...Ch. 37 - In a Youngs double-slit experiment using light of...Ch. 37 - Review. A flat piece of glass is held stationary...Ch. 37 - A certain grade of crude oil has an index of...Ch. 37 - The waves from a radio station can reach a home...Ch. 37 - Interference effects are produced at point P on a...Ch. 37 - Measurements are made of the intensity...Ch. 37 - Many cells are transparent anti colorless....Ch. 37 - Consider the double-slit arrangement shown in...Ch. 37 - Figure P36.35 shows a radio-wave transmitter and a...Ch. 37 - Figure P36.35 shows a radio-wave transmitter and a...Ch. 37 - In a Newtons-rings experiment, a plano-convex...Ch. 37 - Why is the following situation impossible? A piece...Ch. 37 - A plano-concave lens having index of refraction...Ch. 37 - A plano-convex lens has index of refraction n. The...Ch. 37 - Interference fringes are produced using Lloyds...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.68APCh. 37 - Astronomers observe a 60.0-MHz radio source both...Ch. 37 - Figure CQ37.2 shows an unbroken soap film in a...Ch. 37 - Our discussion of the techniques for determining...Ch. 37 - The condition for constructive interference by...Ch. 37 - Both sides of a uniform film that has index of...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.74CPCh. 37 - Monochromatic light of wavelength 620 nm passes...Ch. 37 - Prob. 37.76CP
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