Physics of Sound: Traveling Waves
Physics of Sound: Traveling Waves
Physics of Sound: Traveling Waves
Traveling Waves
Sound is produced when something vibrates. The vibrating body causes the medium (water,
air, etc.) around it to vibrate. Vibrations in air are called traveling longitudinal waves, which
we can hear. Sound waves consist of areas of high and low pressure called compressions and
rarefactions, respectively. Shown in the diagram below is a traveling wave. The shaded bar
above it represents the varying pressure of the wave. Lighter areas are low pressure
(rarefactions) and darker areas are high pressure (compressions). One wavelength of the
wave is highlighted in red. This pattern repeats indefinitely. The wavelength of voice is about
one meter long. The wavelength and the speed of the wave determine the pitch, or frequency
of the sound. Wavelength, frequency, and speed are related by the equation speed = frequency
* wavelength. Since sound travels at 343 meters per second at standard temperature and
pressure (STP), speed is a constant. Thus, frequency is determined by speed / wavelength.
The longer the wavelength, the lower the pitch. The 'height' of the wave is its amplitude. The
amplitude determines how loud a sound will be. Greater amplitude means the sound will be
louder.
Interference
When two waves meet, there can be two kinds of interference patterns; constructive and
destructive. Constructive inteference is when two waveforms are added together. The peaks
add with the peaks, and the troughs add with the troughs, creating a louder sound. Destructive
interference occurs when two waves are out of phase (the peaks on one line up with troughs
on the other). In this, the peaks cancel out the troughs, creating a diminished waveform. For
example, if two waveforms that are exactly the same are added, the amplitude doubles, but
when two opposite waveforms are added, they cancel out, leaving silence.
Standing Waves
Vibration inside a tube forms a standing wave. A standing wave is the result of the wave
reflecting off the end of the tube (whether closed or open) and interfering with itself. When
sound is produced in an instrument by blowing it, only the waves that will fit in the tube
resonate, while other frequencies are lost. The longest wave that can fit in the tube is the
fundamental, while other waves that fit are overtones. Overtones are multiples of the
fundamental. The areas of highest vibration are called antinodes (labeled 'A' on the diagram),
while the areas of least vibration are called nodes (labeled 'N' in the diagram). In an open
pipe, the ends are antinodes. However, in a pipe closed at one end, the closed end is a node,
while the blown end is an antinode. Thus, closed pipes yield only half the harmonics.
Transverse Waves
If a string that is fixed on both ends is bowed or plucked, such as in a violin, vibrations are
formed that are in a standing wave pattern, having nodes at the fixed ends, and an antinode in
the center. Several harmonics are also produced, in a similar way to the standing wave.
Overtones
Overtones are the other frequencies besides the fundamental that exist in musical instruments.
Instruments of different shapes and actions produce different overtones. The overtones
combine to form the characteristic sound of the instrument. For example, both the waves
below are the same frequency, and therefore the same note. But their overtones are different,
and therefore their sounds are different. Note that the violin's jagged waveform produces a
sharper sound, while the smooth waveform of the piano produces a purer sound, closer to a
sine wave. Click on each wave to hear what it sounds like. Keep in mind that all are playing
the same note.