Sound, Decibels, Doppler Effect

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1 Phys101 Lectures 31, 32 Sound, Decibels, Doppler Effect Key points: Intensity of Sound: Decibels Doppler Effect Ref: 12-1,2,7. Page 1

2 Characteristics of Sound Sound can trael through any kind of matter, but not through a acuum. The speed of sound is different in different materials; in general, it is slowest in gases, faster in liquids, and fastest in solids. The speed depends somewhat on temperature, especially for gases.

3 Characteristics of Sound Loudness: related to intensity of the sound wae Pitch: related to frequency Audible range: about 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz; upper limit decreases with age Ultrasound: aboe 20,000 Hz; Infrasound: below 20 Hz

4 Intensity of Sound: Decibels The intensity of a wae is the energy transported per unit time across a unit area. The human ear can detect sounds with an intensity as low as W/m 2 and as high as 1 W/m 2. Perceied loudness, howeer, is not proportional to the intensity.

5 Sound Leel: Decibels The loudness of a sound is much more closely related to the logarithm of the intensity. Sound leel is measured in decibels (db) and is defined as: I 0 is taken to be the threshold of hearing:

6 Example: Sound intensity on the street. At a busy street corner, the sound leel is 75 db. What is the intensity of sound there?

7 Example: Loudspeaker response. A high-quality loudspeaker is adertised to reproduce, at full olume, frequencies from 30 Hz to 18,000 Hz with uniform sound leel ± 3 db. That is, oer this frequency range, the sound leel output does not ary by more than 3 db for a gien input leel. By what factor does the intensity change for the maximum change of 3 db in output sound leel?

8 Conceptual Example: Trumpet players. A trumpeter plays at a sound leel of 75 db. Three equally loud trumpet players join in. What is the new sound leel? 10log 1 I I log 4I I log 4 log I I 10log 4 10log I1 I 0 81dB

9 Example: Airplane roar. The sound leel measured 30 m from a jet plane is 140 db. What is the sound leel at 300 m? (Ignore reflections from the ground.)

10 Example: How tiny the displacement is. Calculate the displacement of air molecules for a sound haing a frequency of 1000 Hz at the threshold of hearing.

11 Intensity of Sound: Decibels The ear s sensitiity aries with frequency. These cures translate the intensity into sound leel at different frequencies.

12 Doppler Effect The Doppler effect occurs when a source of sound is moing with respect to an obserer. A source moing toward an obserer appears to hae a higher frequency and shorter waelength; a source moing away from an obserer appears to hae a lower frequency and longer waelength.

13 f elocity of sound If we can figure out what the change in the waelength is, we also know the change in the frequency. When the source is approaching, the obsered waelength is shorter: source T Then the obsered frequency is: f 1 1 f source T source source f T f sourcet 1

14 Doppler Effect The change in the frequency is gien by: Source approaching: Higher freq. f >f Similarly, if the source is moing away from the obserer: Source receding: Lower freq. f <f

15 Doppler Effect f If the obserer is moing with respect to the source, things are a bit different. The waelength remains the same, but the wae speed is different for the obserer. obs when the obserer is approaching f obs obs 1 f 1 obs

16 For an obserer moing toward a stationary source: Obsered sound elocity: Obsered frequency: obs f obs obs 1 f 1 obs Obserer approaching: Higher freq. f >f And if the obserer is moing away: obs f obs obs 1 f 1 obs Obserer receding: Lower freq. f <f

17 Example: A moing siren. The siren of a police car at rest emits at a predominant frequency of 1600 Hz. What frequency will you hear if you are at rest and the police car moes at 25.0 m/s (a) toward you, and (b) away from you?

18 Example 12-15: Two Doppler shifts. A 5000-Hz sound wae is emitted by a stationary source. This sound wae reflects from an object moing 3.50m/s toward the source. What is the frequency of the wae reflected by the moing object as detected by a detector at rest near the source? (Photo Radar)

19 Doppler Effect All four equations for the Doppler effect can be combined into one; you just hae to keep track of the signs! The signs: Approaching: higher freq. f f Receding: lower freq. f f

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