College Physics
OER 2016 Edition
ISBN: 9781947172173
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: OpenStax College
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Textbook Question
Chapter 17, Problem 12CQ
If audible sound follows a rule of thumb similar to that for ultrasound, in terms of its absorption, would you expect the high or low frequencies from your neighbor’s stereo to penetrate into your house? How does Hus expectation compare with your experience?
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Chapter 17 Solutions
College Physics
Ch. 17 - How do sound vibrations of atoms differ from...Ch. 17 - When sound passes from one medium to another where...Ch. 17 - Six members at a synchronized swim team weal...Ch. 17 - A community is concerned about a plan to bring...Ch. 17 - Is the Doppler shift real or just a sensory...Ch. 17 - Due to eficiency considerations related to its bow...Ch. 17 - When you hear a sonic boom, you often cannot see...Ch. 17 - How does an unamplified guitar produce sounds so...Ch. 17 - You are given two wind instruments of identical...Ch. 17 - What is the difference between an overtone and a...
Ch. 17 - Why can a hearing test show that your threshold of...Ch. 17 - If audible sound follows a rule of thumb similar...Ch. 17 - Elephants and whales are known to use infrasound...Ch. 17 - It is more difficult to obtain a high—resolution...Ch. 17 - Suppose you read mat 210dB ultrasound is being...Ch. 17 - When poked by a spear, an operatic soprano lets...Ch. 17 - What frequency sound has a 0.10m wavelength when...Ch. 17 - Calculate the speed of sound on a day when a 1500...Ch. 17 - Prob. 4PECh. 17 - Show mat the speed of sound in 20.0°C air is 343...Ch. 17 - Air temperature in the Sahara Desert can reach...Ch. 17 - Dolphins make sounds in air and water. What is the...Ch. 17 - A sonar echo returns to a submarine 1.20 s after...Ch. 17 - (a) If a submarine’s sonar can measure echo times...Ch. 17 - A physicist a1 a fireworks display times the lag...Ch. 17 - Prob. 11PECh. 17 - What is the intensity in watts per meter squared...Ch. 17 - The warning tag on a lawn mower states that it...Ch. 17 - A sound wave traveling in 20°C air has a pressure...Ch. 17 - What intensity level does the sound in the...Ch. 17 - What sound intensity level in dB is produced by...Ch. 17 - Show that an intensity of 1012 W/m2 is the same as...Ch. 17 - (a) What is the decibel level of a sound that is...Ch. 17 - (a) What is the intensity of a sound that has a...Ch. 17 - (a) How much more intense is a sound that has a...Ch. 17 - People with good hearing can perceive sounds as...Ch. 17 - If a large housefly 3.0 m away from you makes a...Ch. 17 - Ten cars in a circle at a boom box competition...Ch. 17 - The amplitude of a sound wave is measured in terms...Ch. 17 - If a sound intensity level of 0 dB at 1000 Hz...Ch. 17 - An 8hour exposure to a sound intensity level of...Ch. 17 - (a) Ear trumpets were never very common, but they...Ch. 17 - Sound is more effectively transmitted into a...Ch. 17 - Loudspeakers can produce intense sounds with...Ch. 17 - (a) What frequency is received by a person...Ch. 17 - (a) At an air show a jet flies directly toward the...Ch. 17 - What frequency is received by a mouse just before...Ch. 17 - A spectator at a parade receives an 888-Hz tone...Ch. 17 - A commuter train blows its 200Hz horn as it...Ch. 17 - Can you perceive the shift in frequency produced...Ch. 17 - Two eagles fly directly toward one another. The...Ch. 17 - What is the minimum speed at which a source must...Ch. 17 - A “showy" custom—built car has two brass horns...Ch. 17 - What beat frequencies will be present: (a) If the...Ch. 17 - What beat frequencies result if a piano hammer...Ch. 17 - A piano tuner hears a heat every 2.00 s when...Ch. 17 - (a) What is the fundamental frequency of a...Ch. 17 - If a wind instrument, such as a tuba, has a...Ch. 17 - What are the first three overtones of a bassoon...Ch. 17 - How long must a fiute be in order to have a...Ch. 17 - What length should an oboe have to produce a...Ch. 17 - What is the length of a tube that has a...Ch. 17 - (a) Find the length of an organ pipe closed at one...Ch. 17 - By what fraction will the frequencies produced by...Ch. 17 - Prob. 50PECh. 17 - Calculate the first overtone in an ear canal,...Ch. 17 - Prob. 52PECh. 17 - (a) Students in a physics lab are asked to find...Ch. 17 - What frequencies will a 1.80-m—long tube produce...Ch. 17 - The factor of 1012 in the range of intensities to...Ch. 17 - The frequencies to which the ear responds vary by...Ch. 17 - What are the closest frequencies to 500 Hz that an...Ch. 17 - Can the average person tell that a 2002-Hz sound...Ch. 17 - If your radio is producing an average sound...Ch. 17 - Can you tell that your roommate turned up the...Ch. 17 - Prob. 61PECh. 17 - What sound intensity levels must sounds of...Ch. 17 - What is me approximate sound intensity level in...Ch. 17 - (a) What are the loudnesses in phons of sounds...Ch. 17 - Suppose a person has a 50—UB hearing loss at all...Ch. 17 - If a woman needs an amplification of 5.01012 times...Ch. 17 - (a) What is the intensity in watts per meter...Ch. 17 - (a) Find the intensity in watts per meter squared...Ch. 17 - A person has a hearing threshold 10 dB above...Ch. 17 - A child has a hearing loss of 60 dB near 5000 Hz,...Ch. 17 - What is the ratio of intensi?es of two sounds of...Ch. 17 - What is the sound intensity level in decibels of...Ch. 17 - Is 155—dB ultrasound in the range at intensities...Ch. 17 - Find the sound intensity level in decibels of...Ch. 17 - The time delay between transmission and the...Ch. 17 - Prob. 76PECh. 17 - (a) Calculate the minimum frequency of ultrasound...Ch. 17 - (a) Find the size of the smallest detail...Ch. 17 - (a) Echo times are measured by diagnostic...Ch. 17 - (a) How far apart are two layers of tissue that...Ch. 17 - (a) A bat uses ultrasound to find its way among...Ch. 17 - A dolphin is able to tell in the dark that the...Ch. 17 - A diagnostic ultrasound echo is re?ected from...Ch. 17 - Ultrasound reflected from an oncoming bloodstream...Ch. 17 - Prob. 1TPCh. 17 - Prob. 3TPCh. 17 - Prob. 4TPCh. 17 - Prob. 5TPCh. 17 - Prob. 6TPCh. 17 - Prob. 7TPCh. 17 - Prob. 8TPCh. 17 - Prob. 9TPCh. 17 - Prob. 10TPCh. 17 - Prob. 11TPCh. 17 - Prob. 12TPCh. 17 - Prob. 13TPCh. 17 - Prob. 15TPCh. 17 - Prob. 16TPCh. 17 - Prob. 17TPCh. 17 - Prob. 18TPCh. 17 - Prob. 19TPCh. 17 - Prob. 20TPCh. 17 - Prob. 21TPCh. 17 - Prob. 22TP
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- Check Your Understanding Identify common sounds at the levels of 10 dB, 50 dB, and 100 dB.arrow_forwardThe factor of 10-12 in the range of intensities to which the ear can respond, from threshold to that causing damage after brief exposure, is truly remarkable. If you could measure distances over the same range with a single instrument and the smallest distance you could measure was 1 mm, what would the largest be?arrow_forwardWhat frequency is received by a mouse just before being dispatched by a hawk flying at it at 25.0 m/s and emitting a screech of frequency 3500 Hz? Take the speed of sound to be 331 m/s.arrow_forward
- If a woman needs an amplification of 5.0105 times the threshold intensity to enable her to hear at all frequencies, what is her overall hearing loss in dB? Note that smaller amplification is appropriate for more intense sounds to avoid further damage to her hearing from levels above 90 dB.arrow_forwardPeople with good hearing can perceive sounds as low as -8.00 dB at a frequency of 3000 Hz. What is the intensity of this sound in watts per meter squared?arrow_forwardCheck Your Understanding Describe how amplitude is related to the loudness of a sound.arrow_forward
- An 8-hour exposure to a sound intensity level of 90.0 dB may cause hearing damage. What energy in joules falls on a 0.800-cm-diameter eardrum so exposed?arrow_forwardCheck Your Understanding The equations for the wavelengths and the frequencies of the modes of a wave produced on a string: n=2nLn=1,2,3,4,5...andn=nv2L=nf1n=1,2,3,4,5... were derived by considering a wave on a string where there were symmetric boundary conditions of a node at each end. These modes resulted from two sinusoidal waves with identical characteristics except they were moving in opposite directions, confined to a region L with nodes required at both ends.Will the same equations work if there were symmetric boundary conditions with antinodes at each end? What would the normal modes look like for a medium that was free to oscillate on each end? Don’t worry for now if you cannot imagine such a medium, just consider two sinusoidal wave functions in a region of length L, with antinodes on each end.arrow_forwardWhat is the minimum speed at which a source must travel toward you for you to be able to hear that its frequency is Doppler shifted? That is, what speed produces a shift of 0.300% on a day when the speed of sound is 331 m/s?arrow_forward
- Check Your Understanding Describe how noise-canceling headphones differ from standard headphones used to block outside sounds.arrow_forwardTwo strings are attached to poles, however the first string is twice the linear mass density mu of the second. If both strings have the same tension, what is the ratio of the speed of the pulse of the wave from the first string to the second string?arrow_forwardSome 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_forward
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