Nature, Behavior, and Properties of Sound

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Sound is a Wave

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6sSnMbPl5Q

https://www.khanacademy.org/science/physics/mechanical-waves-and-sound/mechanical-waves/v/introduction-to-waves

Mechanical

A sound wave is a medium (a series of interconnected or interacting particles) that carries the disturbance from one location to another, like air, water, or even metal. There is an original source of the wave, some vibrating object capable of disturbing the first particle of the medium. The sound wave is transported from one location to another by means of particle-to-particle interaction. If the sound wave is moving through air, then as one air particle is displaced from its equilibrium position, it exerts a push or pull on its nearest neighbors, causing them to be displaced from their equilibrium position. This particle interaction continues throughout the entire medium, with each particle interacting and causing a disturbance of its nearest neighbors. Since a sound wave is a disturbance that is transported through a medium via the mechanism of particle-to-particle interaction, a sound wave is characterized as a mechanical wave.

Longitudinal

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LkLj8TS9VI

Sound waves in air (and any fluid medium) are longitudinal waves because particles of the medium through which the sound is transported vibrate parallel to the direction that the sound wave moves. A vibrating string can create longitudinal waves as depicted in the animation below. As the vibrating string moves in the forward direction, it begins to push upon surrounding air molecules, moving them to the right towards their nearest neighbor. This causes the air molecules to the right of the string to be compressed into a small region of space. As the vibrating string moves in the reverse direction (leftward), it lowers the pressure of the air immediately to its right, thus causing air molecules to move back leftward. The lower pressure to the right of the string causes air molecules in that region immediately to the right of the string to expand into a large region of space. The back and forth vibration of the string causes individual air molecules (or a layer of air molecules) in the region immediately to the right of the string to continually vibrate back and forth horizontally. The molecules move rightward as the string moves rightward and then leftward as the string moves leftward. These back and forth vibrations are imparted to adjacent neighbors by particle-to-particle interaction. Other surrounding particles begin to move rightward and leftward, thus sending a wave to the right. Since air molecules (the particles of the medium) are moving in a direction that is parallel to the direction that the wave moves, the sound wave is referred to as a longitudinal wave. The result of such longitudinal vibrations is the creation of compressions and rarefactions within the air.

Pressure

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8adOVT8UcTw

Since a sound wave consists of a repeating pattern of high-pressure and low-pressure regions moving through a medium, it is sometimes referred to as a pressure wave. If a detector, whether it is the human ear or a man-made instrument, were used to detect a sound wave, it would detect fluctuations in pressure as the sound wave impinges upon the detecting device. At one instant in time, the detector would detect a high pressure; this would correspond to the arrival of a compression at the detector site. At the next instant in time, the detector might detect normal pressure. And then finally a low pressure would be detected, corresponding to the arrival of a rarefaction at the detector site. The fluctuations in pressure as detected by the detector occur at periodic and regular time intervals. In fact, a plot of pressure versus time would appear as a sine curve. The peak points of the sine curve correspond to compressions; the low points correspond to rarefactions; and the "zero points" correspond to the pressure that the air would have if there were no disturbance moving through it. The diagram below depicts the correspondence between the longitudinal nature of a sound wave in air and the pressure-time fluctuations that it creates at a fixed detector location.

Behavior

Reflection

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnTAfCqzYZI


Refraction

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UR2rjO0TkU0

Diffraction

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgxcvflVxDM


See Also

Doppler Effect

Frequency

Harmonics

Vibration

Resonance

Intensity

Standing Wave Patterns

Open and Closed Air Columns

Further Reading

http://physics.info/sound/

http://method-behind-the-music.com/mechanics/physics/

https://www.khanacademy.org/science/physics/mechanical-waves-and-sound

External Links

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6sSnMbPl5Q

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LkLj8TS9VI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnTAfCqzYZI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UR2rjO0TkU0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgxcvflVxDM

https://www.khanacademy.org/science/physics/mechanical-waves-and-sound/mechanical-waves/v/introduction-to-waves

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8adOVT8UcTw

References

http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/sound