Answers 3
Answers 3
Answers 3
x3t
x3t
sin(x + 3t) + 0.2 e
= 0.2
e
sin(x + 3t)
x
x
x
= 0.2 ex3t sin(x + 3t) + 0.2 ex3t cos(x + 3t)
and then, using the product rule to differentiate both pieces of y/x,
2y
x3t
x3t
=
+0.2
e
sin(x
+
3t)
0.2
e
cos(x
+
3t)
x2
+
0.2 ex3t cos(x + 3t) 0.2 ex3t sin(x + 3t)
= 0.4 ex3t cos(x + 3t)
x3t
x3t
sin(x + 3t) + 0.2 e
= 0.2
e
sin(x + 3t)
t
t
t
= 0.6 ex3t sin(x + 3t) + 0.6 ex3t cos(x + 3t)
and
2y
x3t
x3t
=
+1.8
e
sin(x
+
3t)
1.8
e
cos(x
+
3t)
t2
+
1.8 ex3t cos(x + 3t) 1.8 ex3t sin(x + 3t)
= 3.6 ex3t cos(x + 3t)
[where 1/9 = (0.4)/(3.6)], which proves that the function satisfies the 1-D wave
equation. The wave speed follows as
1/v 2 = 1/9
v = 3 cm s1
and the direction of propagation must be to the left (x direction), since x and t appear
in the wave function in the combination (x + 3t) only.
(b) From the expressions for y/t and 2 y/t2 in part (a), we have that
2y
y
+ 6
+ 18y =
2
t
t
= 0
as required.
QUESTION 2
(a) The equation for a standing harmonic wave is
y(x, t) = 2A sin(kx) cos(t)
Thus, a particle at position x executes simple harmonic motion about y = 0, with an
angular frequency and an (x-dependent) amplitude 2A sin(kx).
A node is a point at which y = 0 at any time, i.e., a point at which the amplitude of
oscillation is 0. That is,
2A sin(kx) = 0
This is guaranteed at x = 0, which is the fixed end of the string in this problem.
An antinode is a point at which the amplitude of oscillation is the maximum possible:
|2A sin(kx)| = 2A
=
2
sin(kx) = 1
3 5
,
,
, ...
2 2 2
n
n = 1, 3, 5, . . .
kL =
2
kL =
(note that n 0 is not allowed, since the length of the string is a positive quantity).
Then, since the wave number is k = 2/ by definition, the allowed wavelengths of the
normal modes follow from
kL =
2 L
n
=
n =
4L
,
n
n = 1, 3, 5, . . .
Notice the difference from the usual result for standing waves on a string with both
ends fixed. In that case, the wavelengths are n = 2L/n with n = 1, 2, 3, . . .. Here the
factor of 2 has changed to a factor of 4, and only the normal modes with odd-integer are
allowed. Both of these differences follow directly from the different boundary conditions
at x = L (i.e., fixed in the usual case versus free here). See also Benson, Chapter 17.2.
The frequencies of the normal modes are
fn
v
v
nv
=
=
=
n
4L/n
4L
fn
n
=
4L
F
,
n = 1, 3, 5, . . .
where,
p as usual, F is the tension in the sting and is its mass per unit length (so
v = F/ ). If the total mass of the string is M and its total length is L, then
s
r
F
F
n
n
= M/L
=
fn =
=
,
n = 1, 3, 5, . . .
4L M/L
4 ML
To write the wave function in full then requires only applying the definitions k n = 2/n
and n = 2fn , so that
2
yn (x, t) = 2A sin(kn x) cos(n t) = 2A sin
x cos (2fn t)
n
!
r
n
n
F
x cos
t
n = 1, 3, 5, . . .
(1)
= 2A sin
2L
2
ML
Sketches for n = 1, n = 3, and n = 5 are on the next page. General expressions for the
wavelengths n , frequencies fn , and oscillation periods at any fixed x (Tn = 1/fn ) are
indicated in each case. See Benson, Chapter 17.2, for similar illustrations in the context
of standing sound waves in pipes with one open end and one closed end.
n = 6.5 L = 6.5 2 = 13
2 162.5
325
F
=
=
= 25 s1
ML
n
13
QUESTION 3
(a) For an adiabatic process,
P V = constant
which means that the derivative with respect to volume (or indeed any variable) is
d
(P V ) = 0
dV
Using the product rule of differentiation, this becomes
dP
d
V + P
V = 0
dV
dV
dP
+ P V 1 = 0
dV
B V
and thus
P
P V 1
dP
=
=
dV
V
V
dP
= + P
dV
With this result, the adiabatic sound speed in an ideal gas (i.e., one with P V = N kT )
with ratio of specific heats and a mass density = hmiN/V follows as
s
s
s
s
s
s
B
P
P
PV
N kT
kT
v =
=
=
=
=
=
hmiN/V
hmiN
hmiN
hmi
(b) Treating air as a diatomic ideal gas ( = 7/5) composed of 80% N2 (mass 2 14.007 =
28.014 amu) and 20% O2 (mass 2 15.999 = 31.998 amu), the mean particle mass is
(with 1 amu = 1.661 1027 kg)
hmi = (0.8 28.014 + 0.2 31.998) amu = 28.811 amu = 4.785 1026 kg
Thus, at room temperature, T = 293 K, the formula in part (a) gives
s
(7/5) (1.381 1023 J/K) (293 K)
= 344.1 m s1
v =
4.785 1026 kg
for the speed of sound.
In a cloud of molecular hydrogen, = 7/5 again, but hmi = 2 1.0079 = 2.0158 amu =
3.348 1027 kg, so at an interstellar temperature of T = 10 K the speed of sound
predicted by the equation of part (a) is
s
(7/5) (1.381 1023 J/K) (10 K)
v =
= 240.3 m s1
3.348 1027 kg
QUESTION 4
(a) The dark fringes in the interference pattern from two slits separated by d are located at
angles
1
,
m = 0, 1, 2, . . .
d sin =
m+
2
in which (assuming that the screen is at a distance L d from the slits)
sin ' tan =
z
L
for z the distance on the screen from the centre of the screen to the mth-order fringe.
Thus, we have
z
1 L
1
d
=
z =
m+
=
m+
,
m = 0, 1, 2, . . .
L
2
2
d
for the distances of the dark fringes from the centre of the screen.
The third dark fringe corresponds to m = 2 (or m = 2), while the sixth dark fringe
corresponds to m = 5 (or m = 5). The distance between them is therefore
1 L
1 L
L
z =
5+
2+
= 3
2
d
2
d
d
Given that d = 1.2 mm, L = 3.6 m, and z = 5.3 mm, the wavelength of the light
follows as
=
d z
(1.2 103 m) (5.3 103 m)
=
= 5.889 107 m = 588.9 nm
3L
3 (3.6 m)
(b) For diffraction from a single slit of width a, the condition for destructive interference on
a screen a distance L a away is
a sin ' a
z
= M
L
M = 1, 2, 3, . . .
Given that a = 0.15 mm, L = 3.6 m, and = 588.9 nm from part (a), the diffraction
minima closest to the centre of the screen, on either side of the z = 0 intensity peak, are
at
M = +1 = z = L/a = 0.01413 m
M = 1 = z = L/a = 0.01413 m
Hence the total width of the central diffraction maximum is
0.01413 ( 0.01413) = 0.02826 m
6
(2.826 cm)
The number of bright interference fringes contained within this peak follows from an
equation for the positions of constructive interference in the two-slit pattern:
d sin ' d
z
= m
L
z =
mL
d
d
L
The bright fringes appearing within the central diffraction peak must have positions
0.01413 < z < +0.01413 metres, and hence orders
d
d
< m < + 0.01413
L
L
(0.01413 m) (1.2 103 m)
(0.01413 m) (1.2 103 m)
< m <
Consequently, there are fifteen bright fringes (those with m = 7, 6, . . . , +6, +7)
contained within the central diffraction peak in this case.