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Page 1: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Review

Page 2: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Vibrations and Waves

Page 3: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Restoring Force

kxF Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Page 4: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Energy in the Simple Harmonic Oscillator

Page 5: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The Period of Oscillations

Page 6: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

mkf

kmT

/2

1

/2

Page 7: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Important: The period of simple oscillations doesn’t depend on the amplitude!!

Page 8: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The Simple Pendulum

Page 9: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

gLT /2The period doesn’t depend on the mass of bob, it depends only on the length of the thread.

Page 10: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Forced Vibrations; Resonance

Page 11: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The increase of amplitude near f=f0 is known as resonance.

Page 12: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

At what frequencies (if any) except for f0 might be observed a resonance?

Page 13: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. You stand to the side of the low point of a child’s swing and always push the child in the same direction. Which of the following multiplies of the fundamental frequency will not produce resonance: 1/3; ½; 1, or 2?

Page 14: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The wave velocity, v, is the velocity at which wave crests (or any other point of the waveform) move.

Important: Don’t confuse with the velocity of a particle, oscillating in a wave!

fT

v

Page 15: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Velocity of a Wave in a Stretched String

Lm

Fv T

/

Page 16: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Types of Waves

transversal

longitudinal

Page 17: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Interference

Interference refers to what happens when two waves pass each other.

Page 18: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Principle of Superposition

In the region, where the waves overlap, the resultant displacement is the algebraic sum of their separate displacements. Crest is considered positive and trough negative.

Page 19: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. When you yell at your friend, are the air molecules that strike his ear the same ones that were in your lungs? Explain.

2. Which of the following properties affect the speed of waves along a rope: amplitude of the pulse, shape of the pulse, tension in the rope, and/or the mass per unit length of the rope?

Page 20: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Sound and Music

Page 21: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Speed of Sound in the Air:

v=(331 + 0.6T) m/s,

Where T is the temperature in C.

Page 22: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The lowest three frequencies in the string

Page 23: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 24: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 25: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Interference and Sound Waves

Page 26: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Beats

Page 27: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Doppler Effect

Page 28: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. How does the fundamental frequency of an organ pipe, which is open at both ends, change as you close one of the ends?

Page 29: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. You have an organ pipe that resonates at frequencies of 300, 450, and 600 hertz but nothing is between. It may resonant at lower and higher frequencies as well. Is the pipe open at both ends or open at one end and closed at the other? How can you tell?

2. Same for 500, 700 and 900 Hz.

3. An automobile sounding its horn is moving toward you at a constant speed. How does the frequency you hear compare with that heard by the driver?

Page 30: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Static Electricity

Page 31: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The Electroscope

An electroscope is a device that can be used for detecting charge.

Page 32: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 33: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 34: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 35: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Coulomb’s Law

221

r

QQkF

Page 36: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Units of Charge

1 Coulomb (C)

229229 /100.9/10988.8 CmNCmNk

Page 37: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. A handheld glass can be charged by rubbing it with silk or a plastic bag while holding it in your hands. Would you conclude from this that glass is a conductor or an insulator? Why?

2. Why it is easier to charge a balloon on a dry day than on a humid day?

Page 38: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

1. When Coulomb was developing his law, he did not have an instrument for measuring charge. And yet he was able to obtain spheres with ½ ; 1/3; ¼;… of some original charge. How might he have used a set of identical spheres to do this?

Page 39: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

The electric field E at a point in space is defined as an electric force F, acting on a positive test charge q divided by the magnitude of the test charge

q

FE

Page 40: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

204

1

r

QE

Page 41: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Field Lines

Page 42: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 43: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Electric Fields and Conductors

Page 44: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Important: electric field inside of good conductor is zero!!!!

Page 45: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Important: any net charge on a good conductor distributes itself on the surface!!!!

Page 46: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!
Page 47: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

Electric Potential and Potential Difference

Page 48: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

It’s useful to define the electric potential (or simply the potential) as a potential energy per unit charge:

q

PEV a

a

Page 49: Review. Vibrations and Waves Restoring Force Important: the restoring force F is not constant, but varies with position!

d

VE ba

Important: this simple formula for E may be used only for uniform field!!!!