Section 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Explain the physical aspect of sound

A

The measured area of sound: frequency, intensity, spectrum. Ex: If a tree fell in the forest with nobody around, it would still make a sound.

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2
Q

What is the definition of sound

A

The movement of a disturbance (vibration) through an elastic medium (air)

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3
Q

What is equilibrium and how does it relate to sound?

A

The state of rest that undisturbed air remains in where molecules are evenly spaced

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4
Q

What is Brownian Motion/Movement

A

The rapid/random movement of air particles, which varies according to temperature and atmospheric pressure. Ex: A tea kettle heating molecules resulting in molecule movement/ the kettle whistling

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5
Q

What are the prerequisites for sound production?

A
  1. Medium to transmit sound

2. Source of energy

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6
Q

What must a medium have in order to transmit sound?

A

Must have mass/inertia and elasticity

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7
Q

What is Newton’s 2nd law of motion

A

An object in motion stays in motion- the more force, the more acceleration

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8
Q

How do elasticity, mass, inertia, resting force, equilibrium and friction/resistance all relate to sound?

A

An object or mass must be available to vibrate. Said mass must have elasticity in order to vibrate. Inertia shows how a mass wants to stay in equilibrium/ return to equilibrium via it’s restoring force but will continue to be in motion once disturbed. Friction and resistance will eventually force a mass to return to it’s resting state.

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9
Q

What is compression/condensation

A

When air molecules move closer together they become more dense and compressed than atmospheric pressure. ie: the upper portion of a wave

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10
Q

What is rarefaction?

A

When air molecules pull apart- leading to pressure that is less dense than surrounding air pressure. ie: the bottom part of a wave

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11
Q

What is a transverse wave? Does it occur in all mediums?

A

A wave where the molecular motion is perpendicular to the direction of a wave’s motion. It does not occur in liquids or gases as they do not support a shearing stress. Ex: water/cork bobbing on surface.

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12
Q

What is a longitudinal wave?

A

Displacement of the medium is parallel to propagation of the wave. Any matter that responds to compression with elasticity will transmit longitudinal waves.

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13
Q

What type of waves are sound waves?

A

Longitudinal

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14
Q

What is vibration as it relates to sound?

A

Motion back and forth along a path in such a manner that there is a restoring force (potential energy) increasing with displacement and always directed toward a position of rest.

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15
Q

What is restoring force?

A

Force that brings a vibrating object back to resting state

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16
Q

What is displacement?

A

Distance of an object away from equilibrium

17
Q

What is kinetic energy? Where does it exist?

A

Moving energy. Maximum at equilibrium, and zero at maximum displacement where motion is halted

18
Q

What is potential energy? Where is it located?

A

Energy that is not moving/taking place. Maximum potential energy exists at maximum displacement. There is zero at equilibrium.

19
Q

What is Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)

A

The simplest form of vibrating motion, where displacement and restoring force are the same. The waveform repeats itself, and it is pure tone.

20
Q

Explain the psychological aspect of sound

A

The auditory experience: pitch, loudness, timbre/quality. Ex: If nobody is there when a tree falls in the woods, there is no sound in this aspect