Waves Flashcards

1
Q

What is the period of a wave?

A

The time it takes for a source to produce one wave.

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2
Q

What is the wave equation?

A

Speed (V m/s) = frequency (f hertz) x wavelength (l metres)

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3
Q

How do you work out the period of a wave?

A

f = 1 / t

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4
Q

What is an example of a longitudinal wave?

A
  1. Sound waves
  2. Shock waves e.g. some seismic waves
  3. A slinky spring when you push one end
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5
Q

What is an example of a transverse wave?

A
  1. Light waves and all other EM waves
  2. Waves travelling on the surface of water (ripples on water)
  3. Waves on strings
  4. A slinky spring wriggled up and down
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6
Q

What is a transverse wave?

A

Is when the direction of energy transferred is perpendicular to the direction of vibrations.

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7
Q

What is a longitudinal wave?

A

Is when the direction of energy transferred is parallel to the direction of vibrations.

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8
Q

What is the amplitude of a wave?

A

The maximum height of disturbance from the undisturbed position.
louder=higher amplitude

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9
Q

What is the wavelength of a wave?

A

Is the distance from one maximum disturbance to the next (peak to peak or trough to trough).
Higher pitch=shorter wavelength

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10
Q

What is the frequency of a wave?

A

The number of vibrations of the source in one second.

Or the number of waves passing a particular point each second.

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11
Q

Describe reflection

A

When a wave strikes a straight or flat barrier, the angle of incidence is equal to the angle of reflection.

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12
Q

What do all waves do?

A

Waves transfer energy and information without transferring matter

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13
Q

What happens as a wave strikes a concave barrier?

A

The waves become more curved, and are made to converge and there is no change in wavelength.
Example: Radio telescopes are concave so signals received are made to converge onto a detector.

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14
Q

What happens as a wave strikes a convex barrier?

A

The waves are made to diverge (spread out) and there is no change in wavelength.

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15
Q

Describe refraction

A

Refraction is when the speed that the waves are moving changes (and so does their direction), because the waves have travelled into a different medium (e.g. water and air or into denser water)

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16
Q

Describe diffraction

A
  1. Diffraction is when waves spread out after moving through a barrie/pass an edge
  2. For example sound waves diffract when they pass through a barrier / doorways
  3. Diffraction also happens when waves pass a single edge (think as just one very large gap)
  4. An example of diffraction around an edge includes radio waves that are diffracted as they pass over hills.
17
Q

What affects diffraction?

A
  • The amount of diffraction depends on the size of the gap relative to the wavelength of the wave
  • The narrower the gap, or the longer the wavelength the more the waves spread out
  • Waves can be diffracted through gaps and that the extent of diffraction depends on the wavelength and the physical dimension of the gap
  • The effect is most noticeable when the wavelength of the waves is approximately equal to the size of the aperture (hole) through which they are moving
18
Q

What size gaps do harbours want?

A

Harbours want a larger gap because then the waves will cause less disturbance (not so curved waves)

19
Q

What happens when waves encounter obstacles?

A
  • When waves encounter obstacles (e.g. radio waves passing hills and tall buildings), diffraction is what causes them to bend around the obstacle.
  • The longer the wavelength, the more they diffract and bend around.