Light vs.
Sound
If sound is a wave, whats
waving?
Light vs. Sound
What makes a light wave
different from a sound wave?
Light vs. Sound
What makes a light wave
different from a sound wave?
Light travels a lot faster than sound:
Speed of light in air = 300,000,000 meters per second
Speed of sound in air (at 0 Celsius) = 331 meters per
second
At room temperature this increases to about 343 m/s.
Light vs. Sound
What makes a light wave
different from a sound wave?
Light can travel in empty space
Sound cant because sound is the compression of the
medium
For sound traveling in air, sound wave is made of
variations in the pressure of the air
Air Pressure
Sound Wave = variation in pressure
Pressure = Force / Area
Air exerts a force (presses against
surfaces)
Normally air pressure is not very
noticeable because it tends to press
on all side of a surface evenly
Air pressure is greatest at sea level (P
= 1 atmosphere, or 1 atm)
Air Pressure: Examples
Plastic bottle on airplane
Using a straw
Vacuum cleaner
Vacuum Chamber experiments
Sound Wave
Loud Sound -> Big
variation in air
pressure
Crest of wave:
region of high
pressure
Trough of wave:
Region of lower-than-
usual pressure
Animation from Physics
[Link]:
[Link]
Gray = atmospheric pressure
Dark = high pressure
Light = low pressure
Sound Waves Travel As Variations in
Pressure
Transverse vs.
Compression
Light is a transverse wave:
Transverse means that the wave travels perpendicular to
the displacement
Sound is a compression wave
The wave travels in the same direction as the
displacement
Waves on a slinky?
The Wave in a stadium?
Waves on a string?
Earthquakes
Whats the medium
of an earthquake?
P-waves are
compression waves
S-waves are
transverse waves
Travel at different
speeds
Seeing Sound Waves
A microphone converts pressure waves
to electrical signals.
An oscilloscope takes an electrical
signal as input and displays a graph
of the signal as a function of time
Do you think an
oscilloscope could
be used to measure
frequency,
wavelength, or both?
The Octave
Octave = 8 notes apart
Going an octave higher means doubling
the frequency of a note
Going an octave lower means halving the
frequency of a note
Octave demo with oscilloscope:
[Link]
Perception of Sound
Waves
PhET Simulation:
Sound
Review
What determines how fast a wave travels?
Can you make a wave go faster by putting
more energy into the wave?
What, physically, is sound?
Give examples of longitudinal waves and
transverse waves.