College Physics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134601823
Author: ETKINA, Eugenia, Planinšič, G. (gorazd), Van Heuvelen, Alan
Publisher: Pearson,
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Chapter 11, Problem 75GP
To determine
The experiment that can be preformed to measure the speed of sound in air using a graduated cylinder and a tuning fork that produces sound of known frequency. Write the procedure and draw a diagram.
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What are the factors that affect the speed of sound in air? Explain.
Question 17: Which of the following best describes the relationship between the speed of sound and the type of medium through which it travels?
A. Sound travels faster in solids because of the large distance between solid particles
B. Sound travels faster in air because of the small distance between air particles
C. Sound travels slower in solids because of the small distance between solid particles
D. Sound travels slower in air because of the large distance between air particles
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Chapter 11 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 11 - How do you produce a longitudinal wave on a...Ch. 11 - Compare and contrast the speed of a vibrating...Ch. 11 - Prob. 3RQCh. 11 - Prob. 4RQCh. 11 - Why is it impossible to create a traveling wave on...Ch. 11 - Your friend says that it is impossible for two...Ch. 11 - Is the following sentence true? When two...Ch. 11 - One end of a horizontal string of length L passes...Ch. 11 - When we studied traveling waves, we decided that...Ch. 11 - An ambulance siren blares continuously as the...
Ch. 11 - What does it mean if the speed of a wave is 300 m...Ch. 11 - 2. What does it mean if the wavelength of a wave...Ch. 11 - 3. If you wish to represent one period of a wave...Ch. 11 - 4. If you wish to graph the disturbance pattern of...Ch. 11 - Which mathematical expression represents a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 6MCQCh. 11 - Prob. 7MCQCh. 11 - 8. Figure Q11.8 shows the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 9MCQCh. 11 - Prob. 10CQCh. 11 - 11. Figure Q11.11 shows a snapshot of two pulses...Ch. 11 - 12. Can a wave have a period of 2.0 s, a speed of...Ch. 11 - 13. What physics ideas were necessary to construct...Ch. 11 - 14. How do you know that the wavelength of a wave...Ch. 11 - What conditions are necessary to create a...Ch. 11 - Invent and describe an experiment to estimate the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 17CQCh. 11 - 18. Describe two useful types of information a...Ch. 11 - 19. Two speakers hang from racks placed in an open...Ch. 11 - Two identical sound waves are sent down a long...Ch. 11 - Sound waves of all frequencies in the audio...Ch. 11 - How can you show that an object producing sound...Ch. 11 - Describe the common features and differences...Ch. 11 - 24. Why do different guitar strings sound...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Prob. 6PCh. 11 - Prob. 7PCh. 11 - Prob. 8PCh. 11 - Prob. 9PCh. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Assume that the speed of sound in air is 340 m/s...Ch. 11 - Prob. 14PCh. 11 - Telephone line A telephone lineman is told to...Ch. 11 - 16. * A pulse travels at speed v on a stretched...Ch. 11 - 17. A 0.62-kg Slinky has 185 coils. When you and...Ch. 11 - =100g/m and the middle section is made from rope...Ch. 11 - Show using a sketch and mathematics that the...Ch. 11 - Show using a sketch and mathematics that the...Ch. 11 - 22. * You are standing at position A and your...Ch. 11 - Prob. 23PCh. 11 - Prob. 24PCh. 11 - Prob. 26PCh. 11 - 27. Sound wave in Earth A sound wave created by an...Ch. 11 - A 5.0-kg rope that is 20 m long is woven to an...Ch. 11 - Prob. 29PCh. 11 - Repeat the previous problem for the case where the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 31PCh. 11 - 32. Two waves shown in Figure P11.32 at zero...Ch. 11 - Prob. 33PCh. 11 - 34. * Use Huygens' principle and a wave front...Ch. 11 - Prob. 35PCh. 11 - 36. * You have two synchronously vibrating objects...Ch. 11 - Design Describe an experiment to convince a friend...Ch. 11 - 38. The energy of a sound wave is proportional to...Ch. 11 - Prob. 39PCh. 11 - * Supersonic jet The sound intensity 5 km from the...Ch. 11 - * You are in an open field investigating how sound...Ch. 11 - One loudspeaker is producing a tone of frequency...Ch. 11 - 43. * Tovi is playing a flute and Dawn is playing...Ch. 11 - Music in music a very soft sound called...Ch. 11 - 45. Two sounds differ by 1 dB. What is the...Ch. 11 - 46. Calculate the change in intensity level when a...Ch. 11 - Prob. 47PCh. 11 - 48. Banjo fret How far from the end of the banjo...Ch. 11 - * Violin string A 0.33-m-long violin string has a...Ch. 11 - A person secures a 5.0-m-long rope of mass 0.40 kg...Ch. 11 - 51. * Laura and Elana are discussing how to solve...Ch. 11 - Prob. 52PCh. 11 - * Ratio reasoning By what percent does the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 54PCh. 11 - 55. * Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel The 2779-m...Ch. 11 - * Flute A wooden flute, open at both ends, is 0.48...Ch. 11 - Organ pipe The lowest three standing wave...Ch. 11 - The speed of sound can be measured using the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 59PCh. 11 - 60. * A rope of length L is attached to a...Ch. 11 - 61. * A 3.0-m-long rope with a mass of 100 g is...Ch. 11 - * A 1.2-m-long open-closed pipe is producing sound...Ch. 11 - * Figure P11.63 shows the spectrum of sound that...Ch. 11 - Prob. 64PCh. 11 - * See the spectrum in Figure P11.63. (a) Can this...Ch. 11 - Car horn A car horn vibrates at a frequency of 250...Ch. 11 - Train whistle A car drives at a speed of 25 m/s...Ch. 11 - 68. * BIO Speed of blood A source of ultrasound...Ch. 11 - 69. * Circular motion sound source A whistle with...Ch. 11 - BIO Bat echo A bat emits short pulses of sound at...Ch. 11 - 105 Hz emits sound waves and detects the same...Ch. 11 - * Violin strings The speed of a wave on a violin A...Ch. 11 - 73. * Use Huygens' principle and a wave front...Ch. 11 - Prob. 74GPCh. 11 - Prob. 75GPCh. 11 - s teammate shouts at her to catch a ball. Estimate...Ch. 11 - 77. ** EST While camping, you record a thunderclap...Ch. 11 - 78. ** BIO Blood speed A red blood cell travels at...Ch. 11 - Prob. 80RPPCh. 11 - 81. If the car from Problem 11.80 is moving at 20...Ch. 11 - 82. Which answer below is closest to the distance...Ch. 11 - Compare your answers to Problems 11.80 and 11.82....Ch. 11 - While your car from Problem 11.80 is stationary,...Ch. 11 - Prob. 85RPPCh. 11 - Prob. 86RPPCh. 11 - 87. What amplifies the air pressure in the ear?
a....Ch. 11 - Where is the mechanism that allows the ear to...Ch. 11 - Prob. 89RPPCh. 11 - The threshold for pressure variation of a barely...
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- Later in this book, you will learn that sound is a wave. The wavelength and frequency f of a wave are related by f = v where v is the speed of the wave. Musicians refer to these different wavelengths or frequencies by their notes (AG). Use the information in the following table to plot the frequency on the vertical axis and 1/ on the horizontal axis. Give a conceptual Interpretation and numerical value of the slope on your graph.arrow_forwardDog whistles operate at frequencies above the range of human hearing. Explain how two such whistles operating at slightly different frequencies may be used to make a sound audible to a person.arrow_forwardAn interstate highway has been built through a neighborhood in a city. In the afternoon, the sound level in an apartment in the neighborhood is 80.0 dB as 100 cars pass outside the window every minute. Late at night, the traffic flow is only five cars per minute. What is the average late-night sound level?arrow_forward
- The toadfish makes use of resonance in a closed tube to produce very loud sounds. The tube is its swim bladder, used as an amplifier. The sound level of this creature has been measured as high as 100. dB. (a) Calculate the intensity of the sound wave emitted. (b) What is the intensity level if three of these toadfish try to make a sound at the same time?arrow_forwardThe intensity level produced by a jet airplane at a certain location is 150 dB. (a) Calculate the intensity of the sound wave generated by the jet at the given location. (b) Compare the answer to part (a) to the threshold of pain and explain why employees directing jet airplanes at airports must wear hearing protection equipment.arrow_forwardWith a sensitive sound-level meter, you measure the sound of a running spider as -10 dB. What does the negative sign imply? (a) The spider is moving away from you. (b) The frequency of the sound is too low to be audible to humans. (c) The intensity of the sound is too faint to be audible to humans. (d) You have made a mistake; negative signs do not fit with logarithms.arrow_forward
- Noise cancellation headphones use a microphone to pick up background noise and a speaker to produce a sound wave canceling the noise. These headphones arc used on planes or in noisy dormitory rooms to reduce distracting sounds, allowing the wearer to study a physics textbook. Figure 18.18 is a graph of P versus t for the noise produced by a human voice (perhaps a roommate). Sketch a corresponding graph of P versus t that must be generated by the speaker so as to cancel the noise. FIGURE 18.18arrow_forwardEver since seeing Figure 16.22 in the previous chapter, you have been fascinated with the hearing response in humans. You have set up an apparatus that allows you to determine your own threshold of hearing as a function of frequency. After performing the experiment and recording the results, you graph the results, which look like Figure P17.22. You are intrigued by the two dips in the curve at the right-hand side of the graph. You measure carefully and find that the minimum values of these dips occur at 3 800 Hz and 11 500 Hz. Performing some online research, you discover that the outer canal of the human ear can be modeled as an air column open at the outer end and closed at the inner end by the eardrum. You use this information to determine the length of the outer canal in your car. Figure P17.22arrow_forwardYou are working on a senior project and are analyzing a human wave at a sports stadium such as that shown in Figure P16.4 (page 446). You are trying to determine the effect of the wave on concession sales because people are standing up and sitting down while they participate in the wave, instead of buying food or drinks. You have made observations at a local stadium and have taken data on one particularly stable wave. This wave took 47.4 s to travel around a specific stadium row consisting of a circular ring of 974 seats. You also find that a typical time interval for spectators to stand and sit back down is 0.95 s. In this wave, how many people in the specific row were out of their seats at any given instant? Figure P16.4 Problems 4 and 44.arrow_forward
- A sound wave propagates in air at 27C with frequency 4.00 kHz. It passes through a region where the temperature gradually changes and then moves through air at 0C. Give numerical answers to the following questions to the extent possible and state your reasoning about what happens to the wave physically. (a) What happens to the speed of the wave? (b) What happens to its frequency? (c) What happens to its wavelength?arrow_forwardA sound wave traveling in 20°C air has a pressure amplitude of 0.5 Pa. What is the intensity of the wave?arrow_forwardYou are working as an assistant to a landscape architect. who is designing the landscaping around a new commercial building. The architect plans to have a large rectangular water basin as part of his design. When you see this design, you mention to the architect that the project is located in an area prone to earthquakes. You point out that an earthquake could create a seiche in the basin by resonance, causing the water in the basin to spill out and enter nearby underground electrical transformers. A seiche is a standing wave in a body of water, in which the water sloshes back and forth with antinodes at the ends of the basin. (You may have created a seiche in a bathtub as a child by sliding your body back and forth along the length of the tub, leaving water on the floor for your parents to wipe up.) The architect dismisses your comments as unrealistic. While visiting your cousin the previous week in a non-carthquake-prone area, you had seen a water basin similar to the one planned by the architect. You call your cousin and find out that the water basin in his town has the same depth of water as that planned by the architect. You ask your cousin to create a pulse in the water by dropping a pebble, and determine how long the pulse takes to cross the basin. Based on this time interval and the length of your cousins basin, you determine that a pulse will take 2.50 s to cross the basin planned by the architect. Show the architect that there will be several possible seiche resonances in the water basin for typical low frequencies of earthquakes in the range of 04 Hz.arrow_forward
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