Sound
How do humans hear sound?
Explain how different cycles of pressure variations cause different sounds
Pressure wave
A regular pattern of high- and low-pressure regions
Travelling wave
When a pressure wave travels away from its source
It’s a way of transmitting energy
not all travelling waves are pressure waves, such as light
Sound period
The duration of one cycle which is the time interval between any two corresponding points on consecutive cycles of the pressure wave
Time taken for one cycle to occur
A cycle
(or an oscillation)
A complete sequence of motion up to the point at which the motion starts to repeat itself
Why is it that in real life, no two cycles of sound are identical?
Because each cycle is slightly weaker than the one before.
However, over the course of few cycles, there will be very little change from one cycle to the next, so the motion can be regarded as periodic
Sound Wavelength
The distance between any two adjacent regions of high (or low) pressure
Sound Frequency
The number of periods that occur in 1 second
Expressed in Hz (Hertz)
Lowest and Highest frequencies humans can hear
Lowest is 20Hz
Upper limit is 20000Hz or 20 kHz but tends to decline with age
Pitch
How high or low a sound is
It is a subjective term
To measure the speed of sound
measure how long the sound takes to travel a known distance
List the number of factors that the speed of sound depend on and is affected by.
temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure
The speed of sound in air:
around 340 m/s
The frequency and the period have an inverse relationship
f=1/T or T=1/f
The speed of sound has a joint relationship with the wavelength and the frequency or period of the sound
speed of sound = wavelength / period
speed of sound = frequency * wavelength
The phase
the part of a cycle that a particular vibrating system is in at any moment
Principle of Superposition
‘completely’ out of phase waves
there is an exact one half cycle difference in the waves
positive peak of one wave corresponds to the negative peak of the other
What are examples of situations where phase difference can occur?
Amplitude
size or amplitude of sound
a measure of the amount of change in air pressure that the sound produces
Two ways of thinking about amplitude (change in air pressure):
Peak-to-peak amplitude
is the difference between the maximum reduction in air pressure and the maximum increase in air pressure
peak-to-peak amplitude = Pmax - Pmin