11.3: Longitudinal Wave (2024)

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    11.3: Longitudinal Wave (1)

    Playing with a Slinky is a childhood tradition, but few children realize they are actually playing with physics.

    Longitudinal Waves

    Like transverse waves, longitudinal waves are mechanical waves, which means they transfer energy through a medium. Unlike transverse waves, longitudinal waves cause the particles of medium to move parallel to the direction of the wave. They are most common in springs, where they are caused by the pushing an pulling of the spring.

    As shown in the image below, longitudinal waves are a series of compressions and rarefactions, or expansions. The wavelength of longitudinal waves is measured by the distance separating the densest compressions. The amplitude of longitudinal waves is the difference in media density between the undisturbed density to the highest density in a compression.

    11.3: Longitudinal Wave (2)

    Examples

    Example 11.3.1

    A sonar signal (sonar is sound waves traveling through water) of 1.00×106 Hz frequency has a wavelength of 1.50 mm in water. What is the speed of sound in water?

    Solution

    v=λf=(0.00150 m)(1.00×106 s−1)=1500 m/s

    Example 11.3.2

    A sound wave of wavelength 0.70 m and velocity 330 m/s is produced for 0.50 s.

    1. What is the frequency of the wave?
    2. How many complete waves are emitted in this time interval?
    3. After 0.50 s, how far is the wave front from the source of the sound?

    Solution

    1. f=vλ=(330 m/s)/0.70 m=470 s−1
    2. complete waves=(470 cycles/s)(0.50 s)=235 cycles
    3. distance=(330 m/s)(0.50 s)=165 m

    A pan flute is a musical instrument that utilizes different length tubes to produce different notes. What happens inside the flute to produce these sounds? To understand the operation of a pan flute, we need to visualize the movement of invisible air molecules inside a tube - and that isn’t easy! Launch the Pan Flute simulation below to visualize the longitudinal waves created by the movement of air in a tube:

    Interactive Element

    Summary

    • Longitudinal waves cause the particles of medium to move parallel to the direction of the wave.

    Review

    1. Bats use sound echoes to navigate and hunt. They emit pulses of high frequency sound waves which reflect off obstacles in the surroundings. By detecting the time delay between the emission and return of a pulse, a bat can determine the location of the object. What is the time delay between the sending and return of a pulse from an object located 12.5 m away? The approximate speed of sound is 340 m/s.
    2. Sachi is listening to her favorite radio station which broadcasts radio signals with a frequency of 1.023×108 Hz. If the speed of the signals in air is 2.997×108 m/s, what is the wavelength of these radio signals?
    3. A longitudinal wave is observed to be moving along a slinky. Adjacent crests are 2.4 m apart. Exactly 6 crests are observed to move past a given point in 9.1 s. Determine the wavelength, frequency, and speed of this wave.
    4. A sonar signal leaves a submarine, travels through the water to another submarine and reflects back to the original submarine in 4.00 s. If the frequency of the signal was 512 cycles per second and the wavelength of the signal was 2.93 m, how far away is the second submarine?

    Explore More

    Use this resource to answer the questions that follow.

    1. In your own words, how are compressions and rarefactions produced by the tuning fork?
    2. Make a guess why sound can easily travel around corners (Hint: think of its medium).

    Additional Resources

    Study Guide: Waves Study Guide

    Real World Application: Surround Sound

    PLIX: Play, Learn, Interact, eXplore: Mechanical Wave, Longitudinal Sound Waves

    Videos:

    11.3: Longitudinal Wave (2024)

    FAQs

    11.3: Longitudinal Wave? ›

    Like transverse waves, longitudinal waves are mechanical waves, which means they transfer energy through a medium. Unlike transverse waves, longitudinal waves cause the particles of medium to move parallel to the direction of the wave.

    What is a longitudinal wave? ›

    Longitudinal waves are waves in which the vibration of the medium is parallel to the direction the wave travels and displacement of the medium is in the same (or opposite) direction of the wave propagation.

    What are 3 types of longitudinal waves? ›

    Some examples of longitudinal waves are sound waves, seismic P-waves, and ultrasound waves.

    How do you calculate longitudinal waves? ›

    Longitudinal waves can be described mathematically by the same equation as transverse waves: y(x,t) = A sin (2π x/λ - 2πf t + φ). Only now, y(x,t) is the horizontal displacement at time t and location x of the material in the wave from equilibrium instead of the vertical displacement from equilibrium.

    What is a wavelength in longitudinal wave? ›

    The wavelength in a longitudinal wave is the distance between two consecutive points that are in phase. The wavelength in a longitudinal wave refers to the distance between two consecutive compressions or between two consecutive rarefactions.

    What are 4 examples of longitudinal waves? ›

    Examples of Longitudinal Waves
    • Sound waves in air.
    • The primary waves of an earthquake.
    • Ultrasound.
    • The vibration of a spring.
    • The fluctuations in a gas.
    • The tsunami waves.

    What is the speed of a longitudinal wave? ›

    The speed of longitudinal wave is given by v=√Eρ where ρ is the density of the medium. Match the following columns for the quantities represented by E in different media. Q. Match the Column I and Column II (Based on the possible number of geometrical isomers).

    How do longitudinal waves travel? ›

    A longitudinal wave travels in the same direction as the disturbance that caused it. Longitudinal waves move through a medium from the point of the disturbance in the form of compressions (where particles of the medium are bunched together) followed by rarefactions (where particles of the medium are farther apart).

    What are the 4 main types of waves? ›

    Section Key Terms
    longitudinal wavemechanical wavemedium
    periodic wavepulse wavetransverse wave
    Mar 26, 2020

    What are the 4 parts of a longitudinal wave? ›

    A longitudinal waves can be defined as one where the direction of the vibration of the medium lies parallel to that of the wave. The displacement of the medium is, however, in the direction of the movement of the wave. Its main properties are rarefaction, amplitude, compression, frequency, and period.

    How do you read a longitudinal wave? ›

    The wavelength of longitudinal waves is measured by the distance separating the densest compressions. The amplitude of longitudinal waves is the difference in media density between the undisturbed density to the highest density in a compression. Longitudinal waves can travel farthest through the earth.

    Do longitudinal waves have frequency? ›

    Similar to other types of waves, longitudinal waves have frequency. Frequency refers to the number of waves that passes a fixed point per unit time. It is also defined as the number of wavelengths per second.

    Can longitudinal waves travel through a vacuum? ›

    Longitudinal waves are like mechanical waves which need the medium to propagate. These waves cannot travel through a vacuum.

    What does it mean if a wave is longitudinal? ›

    Longitudinal waves are a class of waves in which the particles of the disturbed medium are displaced in a direction that is parallel to the direction of propagation of the wave.

    What is longitudinal wave class 11? ›

    A longitudinal wave is a wave in which the particles of the medium vibrate in the same direction, as the propagation of the wave. A longitudinal wave travels in the form of compressions and rarefactions. A sound wave is an example of a longitudinal wave.

    Why is it called a longitudinal wave? ›

    The wave in which the particles of the medium oscillate parallel to the direction of propagation of the wave is called a longitudinal wave. Sound waves similarly oscillate parallel to the direction of propagation, forming the compressions and rarefactions. Hence sound waves are called longitudinal waves.

    What is the difference between a transverse wave and a longitudinal wave? ›

    In longitudinal waves, particles move parallel to the wave direction, whereas in the transverse wave, particles move perpendicular to the wave. Longitudinal waves can travel through solids, liquids, and gases, while transverse waves typically travel through solids and on the surface of the liquids.

    Is light longitudinal or transverse? ›

    Light is an example of a transverse wave. With regard to transverse waves in matter, the displacement of the medium is perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the wave.

    How do longitudinal waves move? ›

    A longitudinal wave travels in the same direction as the disturbance that caused it. Longitudinal waves move through a medium from the point of the disturbance in the form of compressions (where particles of the medium are bunched together) followed by rarefactions (where particles of the medium are farther apart).

    How do you describe a transverse wave? ›

    transverse wave, motion in which all points on a wave oscillate along paths at right angles to the direction of the wave's advance. Surface ripples on water, seismic S (secondary) waves, and electromagnetic (e.g., radio and light) waves are examples of transverse waves. transverse wave.

    References

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