COLLEGE PHYSICS
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781711470832
Author: OpenStax
Publisher: XANEDU
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Textbook Question
Chapter 17, Problem 7CQ
When you hear a sonic boom, you often cannot see the plane that made it. Why is that?
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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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- Plastic beads can often carry a small charge and therefore can generate electric fields. Three beads are oriented such that system of all three beads is zero. 91 E field lines 93 92 What charge does each bead carry? 91 92 -1.45 = = What is the net charge of the system? What charges have to be equal? μC 2.9 × What is the net charge of the system? What charges have to be equal? μC 93 = 2.9 μС 92 is between and 91 93° The sum of the charge on q₁ and 92 is 91 + 92 = −2.9 μC, and the net charge of thearrow_forwardPlastic beads can often carry a small charge and therefore can generate electric fields. Three beads are oriented such that 92 is between q₁ and 93. The sum of the charge on 9₁ and 92 is 9₁ + 92 = −2.9 µС, and the net charge of the system of all three beads is zero. E field lines 93 92 What charge does each bead carry? 91 92 -1.45 What is the net charge of the system? What charges have to be equal? μC 2.9 ✓ What is the net charge of the system? What charges have to be equal? μC 93 2.9 μεarrow_forwardNo chatgpt pls will upvotearrow_forward
- Point charges of 6.50 μC and -2.50 μC are placed 0.300 m apart. (Assume the negative charge is located to the right of the positive charge. Include the sign of the value in your answers.) (a) Where can a third charge be placed so that the net force on it is zero? 0.49 m to the right of the -2.50 μC charge (b) What if both charges are positive? 0.49 xm to the right of the 2.50 μC chargearrow_forwardFind the electric field at the location of q, in the figure below, given that q₁ =9c9d = +4.60 nC, q = -1.00 nC, and the square is 20.0 cm on a side. (The +x axis is directed to the right.) magnitude direction 2500 x What symmetries can you take advantage of? What charges are the same magnitude and the same distance away? N/C 226 × How does charge sign affect the direction of the electric field? counterclockwise from the +x-axis 9a 9b % 9 9darrow_forwardwould 0.215 be the answer for part b?arrow_forward
- Suppose a toy boat moves in a pool at at a speed given by v=1.0 meter per second at t=0, and that the boat is subject to viscous damping. The damping on the boat causes the rate of speed loss to be given by the expression dv/dt=-2v. How fast will the boat be traveling after 1 second? 3 seconds? 10 seconds? Use separation of variables to solve this.arrow_forwardWhat functional form do you expect to describe the motion of a vibrating membrane without damping and why?arrow_forwardIf speed is tripled, how much larger will air drag become for an object? Show the math.arrow_forward
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