Physics for Scientists and Engineers
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781337553278
Author: Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 17, Problem 38AP

You 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 cousin’s 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 0–4 Hz.

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Chapter 17 Solutions

Physics for Scientists and Engineers

Ch. 17 - Two identical loudspeakers 10.0 m apart are driven...Ch. 17 - Two sinusoidal waves on a string are defined by...Ch. 17 - Verify by direct substitution that the wave...Ch. 17 - Prob. 9PCh. 17 - A standing wave is described by the wave function...Ch. 17 - Prob. 11PCh. 17 - A taut string has a length of 2.60 m and is fixed...Ch. 17 - A string that is 30.0 cm long and has a mass per...Ch. 17 - In the arrangement shown in Figure P17.14, an...Ch. 17 - Review. A sphere of mass M = 1.00 kg is supported...Ch. 17 - Review. A sphere of mass M is supported by a...Ch. 17 - Prob. 17PCh. 17 - Review. A solid copper object hangs at the bottom...Ch. 17 - The Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia, has the highest...Ch. 17 - Prob. 20PCh. 17 - The fundamental frequency of an open organ pipe...Ch. 17 - Ever since seeing Figure 16.22 in the previous...Ch. 17 - An air column in a glass tube is open at one end...Ch. 17 - A shower stall has dimensions 86.0 cm 86.0 cm ...Ch. 17 - Prob. 25PCh. 17 - Prob. 26PCh. 17 - As shown in Figure P17.27, water is pumped into a...Ch. 17 - As shown in Figure P17.27, water is pumped into a...Ch. 17 - Prob. 29PCh. 17 - Why is the following situation impossible? A...Ch. 17 - Review. A student holds a tuning fork oscillating...Ch. 17 - Prob. 32PCh. 17 - Suppose a flutist plays a 523-Hz C note with first...Ch. 17 - Two strings are vibrating at the same frequency of...Ch. 17 - Prob. 35APCh. 17 - A 2.00-m-long wire having a mass of 0.100 kg is...Ch. 17 - Prob. 37APCh. 17 - You are working as an assistant to a landscape...Ch. 17 - Review. Consider the apparatus shown in Figure...Ch. 17 - Review. For the arrangement shown in Figure...Ch. 17 - Review. A loudspeaker at the front of a room and...Ch. 17 - Two speakers are driven by the same oscillator of...Ch. 17 - A standing wave is set up in a string of variable...Ch. 17 - Review. The top end of a yo-yo string is held...Ch. 17 - Prob. 45APCh. 17 - Prob. 46APCh. 17 - Review. A 12.0-kg object hangs in equilibrium from...Ch. 17 - Review. An object of mass m hangs in equilibrium...Ch. 17 - Two waves are described by the wave functions...Ch. 17 - Prob. 50CP
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