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Chapter Summary

14.1 Sound

  • Sound is a disturbance of matter that is transmitted from its source outward.
  • Sound is one type of wave.
  • Hearing is the perception of sound.

14.2 Speed of Sound, Frequency, and Wavelength

The relationship of the speed of sound [latex]v_{w}[/latex], its frequency [latex]f[/latex], and its wavelength [latex]\lambda[/latex] is given by

[latex]v_{\text{w}} = fλ ,[/latex]

which is the same relationship given for all waves.

In air, the speed of sound is related to air temperature [latex]T[/latex] by

[latex]v_{\text{w}} = \left(\text{331} \text{m}/\text{s}\right) \sqrt{\frac{T}{\text{273} \text{K}}} .[/latex]

[latex]v_{\text{w}}[/latex] is the same for all frequencies and wavelengths.

14.3 Sound Intensity and Sound Level

  • Intensity is the same for a sound wave as was defined for all waves; it is
    [latex]I = \frac{P}{A} ,[/latex]

    where [latex]P[/latex] is the power crossing area [latex]A[/latex]. The SI unit for [latex]I[/latex] is watts per meter squared. The intensity of a sound wave is also related to the pressure amplitude [latex]Δ p[/latex]

    [latex]I = \frac{\left(\left(\right. Δ p \left.\right)\right)^{2}}{2 \rho\text{v}_{w}} ,[/latex]

    where [latex]\rho[/latex] is the density of the medium in which the sound wave travels and [latex]v_{w}[/latex] is the speed of sound in the medium.

  • Sound intensity level in units of decibels (dB) is
    [latex]\beta \left(\text{dB}\right) = \text{10} \text{log}_{\text{10}} \left(\frac{I}{I_{0}}\right) ,[/latex]

    where [latex]I_{0} = 10^{–12} W/ \text{m}^{2}[/latex] is the threshold intensity of hearing.

14.4 Doppler Effect and Sonic Booms

  • The Doppler effect is an alteration in the observed frequency of a sound due to motion of either the source or the observer.
  • The actual change in frequency is called the Doppler shift.
  • A sonic boom is constructive interference of sound created by an object moving faster than sound.
  • A sonic boom is a type of bow wake created when any wave source moves faster than the wave propagation speed.
  • For a stationary observer and a moving source, the observed frequency [latex]f_{\text{obs}}[/latex] is:
    [latex]f_{\text{obs}} = f_{s} \left(\frac{v_{w}}{v_{w} \pm v_{s}}\right) ,[/latex]

    where [latex]f_{s}[/latex] is the frequency of the source, [latex]v_{s}[/latex] is the speed of the source, and [latex]v_{w}[/latex] is the speed of sound. The minus sign is used for motion toward the observer and the plus sign for motion away.

  • For a stationary source and moving observer, the observed frequency is:
    [latex]f_{\text{obs}} = f_{s} \left(\frac{v_{w} \pm v_{\text{obs}}}{v_{w}}\right) ,[/latex]

    where [latex]v_{\text{obs}}[/latex] is the speed of the observer.

14.5 Sound Interference and Resonance: Standing Waves in Air Columns

  • Sound interference and resonance have the same properties as defined for all waves.
  • In air columns, the lowest-frequency resonance is called the fundamental, whereas all higher resonant frequencies are called overtones. Collectively, they are called harmonics.
  • The resonant frequencies of a tube closed at one end are:
    [latex]f_{n} = n \frac{v_{w}}{4 L} ,\textrm{ }\text{ } n = 1, 3, 5 . . .,[/latex]

    [latex]f_{1}[/latex] is the fundamental and [latex]L[/latex] is the length of the tube.

  • The resonant frequencies of a tube open at both ends are:
    [latex]f_{n} = n \frac{v_{w}}{2 L} ,\textrm{ }\text{ } n = 1, 2, 3 . . .[/latex]

14.6 Hearing

  • The range of audible frequencies is 20 to 20,000 Hz.
  • Those sounds above 20,000 Hz are ultrasound, whereas those below 20 Hz are infrasound.
  • The perception of frequency is pitch.
  • The perception of intensity is loudness.
  • Loudness has units of phons.

14.7 Ultrasound

  • The acoustic impedance is defined as:
    [latex]Z = ρv ,[/latex]

    [latex]\rho[/latex] is the density of a medium through which the sound travels and [latex]v[/latex] is the speed of sound through that medium.

  • The intensity reflection coefficient [latex]a[/latex], a measure of the ratio of the intensity of the wave reflected off a boundary between two media relative to the intensity of the incident wave, is given by
    [latex]a = \frac{\left(Z_{2} - Z_{1}\right)^{2}}{\left(Z_{1} + Z_{2}\right)^{2}} .[/latex]
  • The intensity reflection coefficient is a unitless quantity.

Section Summary” from College Physics 2e by OpenStax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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