IGCSE Physics : Topic 3 Properties of Waves, Including Sound and Light

3.1 General Waves Properties

Wave front: Peak of a transverse wave of compression of a longitudinal wave

Speed: How fast the wave is travelling (m/s)

Frequency: number of complete waves in one second (1/period)

Period: number of time for one complete wave

Amplitude: Maximum distance from peak to rest position

Wavelength: Distance from a certain point to the same point of another wave

Speed= Frequency x wavelength



Refraction
when the water waves pass through shallower water they slow down the waves. When waves slow down they change direction.
-waves slow down when they pass from a less to a more dense material and vice versa -when a wave is slowed down, it is refracted towards the normal (i > r) -when a wave is sped up, it is refracted away from the normal (i < r)
-deep water is denser than shallow water

Diffraction
waves bend round the sides of an obstacle, or spread out as they pass through a gap. Wider gaps produce less diffraction.

Wave Evidence
-Light reflects from mirrors; sound reflects from hard surfaces.
-Light bends when it passes from air into glass or water
-Sound bends around when obstacles such as walls and buildings
-Light spreads when it passes through tiny holes and slits.
-Some radio signals can bend round very large obstacles such as hills

3.2- Sound

-They are caused by vibrations, they are longitudinal, need material to travel through     Speed of sound in air- 330m/s    liquid- 1400m/s   solid-5000m/s

-Speed of sound isn't affected by pressure, but will increase in higher temperature

-human hearing range= 20Hz- 20000Hz, beyond the hearing range= ultrasound

- To increase sound level, increase amplitude; to increase pitch, increase frequency

Echoes

speed of sound= 2 x distance to wall/ echo time

Uses of echoes- Echo-sounder ( Measure depth of water), Radar( Measuring the 'echo times' of microwave pulses reflected from them), Electronic tape measure.
  
3.3 Light

Reflection of light (Plane Mirror)

Plane (flat) mirrors produce a reflection. Rays from an object reflect off the mirror into our eyes, but we see them behind the mirror. 

The image has these properties:
-the image is the same size as the object
-the image is the same distance from the mirror as the object
-a line joining equivalent points of the image and object meet the mirror at a right angle
-the image is virtual: no rays actually pass through the image and the image cannot be formed on a screen

Laws of reflection: Angle of incidence = angle of reflection.

Refractive index
sin i (Air)/ Sin r (Medium)

Speed of light in vacuum/speed of light in medium

sin critical angle= (1/refractive index)

Critical Angle and Total Internal Reflection


Optical fibres: light put in at one end is totally internally reflected until it comes out the other end. This is used in communications where signals are coded and sent along the fibre as pulses of laser light, and in medicine: an endoscope, an instrument used by surgeons to look inside the body. It contains a long bundle of optic fibres.

Converging Lens
Principal focus: the point where rays parallel to the principal axis converge with a converging lens.
Focal length: distance from the principle focus and the optical centre.
Principal axis: the line the goes through the optical centre, and the 2 foci.
Optical centre: the centre of the lens

Dispersion of light
-If a beam of white light is passed through a prism, it splits into a range of colours called a spectrum. Red is deviated the least and Purple is deviated the most.

Electromagnetic spectrum
-travel at the speed of light: 3 × 108m/s
-do not need a medium to travel through i.e. can travel through a vacuum
-are produced by particles oscillating or losing energy in some way
-are transverse waves

Types of electromagnetic waves

Radio waves –radio and television communications

Microwaves –satellite television and telephones (causes internal heating of body tissues)

Infrared – electrical appliances (radiant heaters and grills), remote controllers for televisions and intruder alarms

X-rays – medicine (x-ray photography and killing cancer cells) and security (cause cancer)

Monochromatic light= light with only one colour and one wavelength

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Next Topic

Topic 1 General Physics

Topic 2 Thermal Physics

Topic 3 Properties of Waves, Including Sound and Light

Topic 4 Electricity and Magnetism


Topic 5 Atomic Physics

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