College Physics (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780321902788
Author: Hugh D. Young, Philip W. Adams, Raymond Joseph Chastain
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 12, Problem 39P
(a) By what factor must the sound intensity be increased to raise the sound intensity level by 13.0 dB? (b) Explain why you don’t need to know the original sound intensity.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 12 Solutions
College Physics (10th Edition)
Ch. 12 - What kinds of energy are associated with waves on...Ch. 12 - Sci-fi movies sometimes show the explosion of a...Ch. 12 - Which of the characteristics of a sound wave...Ch. 12 - Energy can be transferred along a string by wave...Ch. 12 - On an episode of Mythbusters, rock singer Jaime...Ch. 12 - Prob. 6CQCh. 12 - Two tuning forks have identical frequencies, but...Ch. 12 - (a) Does a sound level of zero decibels mean that...Ch. 12 - Players of stringed instruments tune them by...Ch. 12 - You are standing several meters from the railroad...
Ch. 12 - TV weather forecasters often refer to Doppler...Ch. 12 - A wire under tension and vibrating in its first...Ch. 12 - A segment A of wire stretched tightly between two...Ch. 12 - A string that is 6.0 m long is tied between two...Ch. 12 - An organ pipe open at one end, but closed at the...Ch. 12 - A person listening to a siren from a stationary...Ch. 12 - A string of length 0.600 m is vibrating at 100.0...Ch. 12 - When a 15 kg mass is hung vertically from a thin,...Ch. 12 - Prob. 7MCPCh. 12 - An organ pipe open at both ends is resonating in...Ch. 12 - Prob. 9MCPCh. 12 - Traffic noise on Beethoven Boulevard has an...Ch. 12 - A thin, light string supports a weight W hanging...Ch. 12 - String A weighs twice as much as string B. Both...Ch. 12 - (a) Audible wavelengths. The range of audible...Ch. 12 - Prob. 2PCh. 12 - If an earthquake wave having a wavelength of 13 km...Ch. 12 - A fisherman notices that his boat is moving up and...Ch. 12 - A steel wire is 2.00 m long and is stretched with...Ch. 12 - With what tension must a rope with length 2.50 m...Ch. 12 - One end of a horizontal rope is attached to a...Ch. 12 - Prob. 8PCh. 12 - A certain transverse wave is described by the...Ch. 12 - Transverse waves on a string have wave speed 8.00...Ch. 12 - The equation describing a transverse wave on a...Ch. 12 - Transverse waves are traveling on a long string...Ch. 12 - Mapping the ocean floor. The ocean floor is mapped...Ch. 12 - In Figure 12.38, each pulse is traveling on a...Ch. 12 - Prob. 15PCh. 12 - A piano tuner stretches a steel piano wire with a...Ch. 12 - A physics student suspends a 1 kg mass from a...Ch. 12 - A wire with mass 40.0 g is stretched so that its...Ch. 12 - The portion of string between the bridge and upper...Ch. 12 - Guitar string. One of the 63.5-cm-long strings of...Ch. 12 - Prob. 21PCh. 12 - Find the fundamental frequency and the frequency...Ch. 12 - The longest pipe found in most medium-sized pipe...Ch. 12 - The fundamental frequency of a pipe that is open...Ch. 12 - The role of the mouth in sound. The production of...Ch. 12 - The end of a stopped pipe is to be cut off so that...Ch. 12 - Prob. 27PCh. 12 - Singing in the shower! Assume that your shower is...Ch. 12 - You blow across the open mouth of an empty test...Ch. 12 - Two small speakers A and B are driven in step at...Ch. 12 - In a certain home sound system, two small speakers...Ch. 12 - Prob. 32PCh. 12 - Human hearing. The human outer ear contains a more...Ch. 12 - Ultrasound and infrasound. (a) Whale...Ch. 12 - A 75.0 cm wire of mass 5.625 g is tied at both...Ch. 12 - A small omnidirectional stereo speaker produces...Ch. 12 - Find the intensity (in W/m2) of (a) a 55.0 dB...Ch. 12 - Find the noise level (in dB) of a sound having an...Ch. 12 - (a) By what factor must the sound intensity be...Ch. 12 - Eavesdropping! You are trying to overhear a juicy...Ch. 12 - Energy delivered to the ear. Sound is detected...Ch. 12 - (a) If the amplitude in a sound wave is tripled,...Ch. 12 - A baseball park is filled with 5000 home-team...Ch. 12 - (a) What is the sound intensity level in a car...Ch. 12 - A trumpet player is tuning his instrument by...Ch. 12 - Two tuning forks are producing sounds of...Ch. 12 - Two guitarists attempt to play the same note of...Ch. 12 - Tuning a violin. A violinist is tuning her...Ch. 12 - A railroad train is traveling at 25.0 m/s in still...Ch. 12 - Two train whistles, A and B, each have a frequency...Ch. 12 - On the planet Arrakis, a male ornithoid is flying...Ch. 12 - You are driving down the road at 15.6 m/s (35 mph)...Ch. 12 - A railroad train is traveling at 30.0 m/s in still...Ch. 12 - The siren of a fire engine that is driving...Ch. 12 - A stationary police car emits a sound of frequency...Ch. 12 - A container ship is traveling westward at a speed...Ch. 12 - While sitting in your car by the side of a country...Ch. 12 - Moving source vs. moving listener. (a) A sound...Ch. 12 - How fast (as a percentage of light speed) would a...Ch. 12 - One end of a 14.0-m-long wire having a total mass...Ch. 12 - Ultrasound in medicine. A 2.00 MHz sound wave...Ch. 12 - A very noisy chain saw operated by a tree surgeon...Ch. 12 - Tuning a cello. A cellist tunes the C-string of...Ch. 12 - A bat flies toward a wall, emitting a steady sound...Ch. 12 - The sound source of a ships sonar system operates...Ch. 12 - The range of human hearing. A young person with...Ch. 12 - A person leaning over a 125-m-deep well...Ch. 12 - Prob. 68GPCh. 12 - A small musical toy produces a steady tone at 1000...Ch. 12 - A turntable 1.50 m in diameter rotates at 75 rpm....Ch. 12 - Musical scale. The frequency ratio of a semitone...Ch. 12 - BIO Waves on vocal cords. In the larynx, sound is...Ch. 12 - BIO Waves on vocal cords. In the larynx, sound is...Ch. 12 - BIO Waves on vocal cords. In the larynx, sound is...Ch. 12 - If the deepest structure you wish to image is 10.0...Ch. 12 - After a beam passes through 10 cm of tissue, what...Ch. 12 - Because the speed of ultrasound in bone is about...Ch. 12 - BIO Waves on vocal cords. In the larynx, sound is...Ch. 12 - For cranial ultrasound, why is it advantageous to...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Do you feel yourself thro to either side when you negotiate a curve that is ideally banked for your car’s speed...
University Physics Volume 1
11. A ball thrown horizontally at 25 m/s travels a horizontal distance of 50 m before hitting the ground. From...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
The pV-diagram of the Carnot cycle.
Sears And Zemansky's University Physics With Modern Physics
How does the total amount of energy coming from the Sun compare to the total amount of energy leaving Earth to ...
Lecture- Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy
The force that must be applied on the string to bring it into contact with the neck.
Physics (5th Edition)
Choose the best answer to each of the following. Explain your reasoning. The fact that we always see the same f...
The Cosmic Perspective Fundamentals (2nd Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- A sound wave in air has a pressure amplitude equal to 4.00 103 Pa. Calculate the displacement amplitude of the wave at a frequency of 10.0 kHz.arrow_forwardA sound wave traveling in air has a pressure amplitude of 0.5 Pa. What is the intensity of the wave?arrow_forwardA sound wave can be characterized as (a) a transverse wave, (b) a longitudinal wave, (c) a transverse wave or a longitudinal wave, depending on the nature of its source, (d) one that carries no energy, or (e) a wave that does not require a medium to be transmitted from one place to the other.arrow_forward
- Some studies suggest that the upper frequency limit of hearing is determined by the diameter of the eardrum. The wavelength of the sound wave and the diameter of the eardrum are approximately equal at this upper limit. If the relationship holds exactly, what is the diameter of the eardrum of a person capable of hearing 20 000 Hz? (Assume a body temperature of 37.0C.)arrow_forwardA flute has a length of 58.0 cm. If the speed of sound in air is 343 m/s, what is the fundamental frequency of the flute, assuming it is a tube closed at one end and open at the other? (a) 148 Hz (b) 296 Hz (c) 444 Hz (d) 591 Hz (e) none of those answersarrow_forwardWrite an expression that describes the pressure variation as a function of position and time for a sinusoidal sound wave in air. Assume the speed of sound is 343 m/s, = 0.100 m, and Pmax = 0.200 Pa.arrow_forward
- A person wears a hearing aid that uniformly increases the intensity level of all audible frequencies of sound by 30.0 dB. The hearing aid picks up sound having a frequency of 250 Hz at an intensity of 3.0 1011 W/m2. What is the intensity delivered to the eardrum?arrow_forwardThe area of a typical eardrum is about 5.00 X 10-5 m2. (a) (Calculate the average sound power incident on an eardrum at the threshold of pain, which corresponds to an intensity of 1.00 W/m2. (b) How much energy is transferred to the eardrum exposed to this sound lor 1.00 mill?arrow_forward(a) What is the intensity of a sound that has a level 7.00 dB lower than a 4.00109W/m2 sound? (b) What is the intensity of a sound that is 3.00 dB higher than a 4.00109W/m2 sound?arrow_forward
- Consider a diagnostic ultrasound of frequency 5.00 MHz that is used to examine an irregularity in soft tissue. (a) What is the wavelength in air of such a sound wave if the speed of sound is 343 m/s? (b) If the speed of sound in tissue is 1800 m/s, what is the wavelength of this wave in tissue?arrow_forwardBased on the graph in Figure 17.36, what is the threshold of hearing in decibels for frequencies of 60, 400, 1000, 4000, and 15,000 Hz? Note that many AC electrical appliances produce 60 Hz, music is commonly 400 Hz, a reference frequency is 1000 Hz, your maximum sensitivity is near 4000 Hz, and many older TVs produce a 15,750 Hz whine. Figure 17.36 The relationship of loudness in phons to intensity level (in decibels) and intensity (in watts per meter squared) for persons with normal hearing. The curved lines are equal-loudness curves—all sounds on a given curve are perceived as equally loud. Phons and decibels are defined to be the same at 1000 Hz.arrow_forwardAt t = 0, a transverse pulse in a wire is described by the function y=6.00x2+3.00 where xand y are in meters. If the pulse is traveling in the positive x direction with a speed of 4.50 m/s, write the function y(x, t) that describes this pulse.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- University Physics Volume 1PhysicsISBN:9781938168277Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax - Rice UniversityCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781938168000Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger HinrichsPublisher:OpenStax CollegeCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage Learning
University Physics Volume 1
Physics
ISBN:9781938168277
Author:William Moebs, Samuel J. Ling, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax - Rice University
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781938168000
Author:Paul Peter Urone, Roger Hinrichs
Publisher:OpenStax College
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
What Are Sound Wave Properties? | Physics in Motion; Author: GPB Education;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GW6_U553sK8;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY