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Wave
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Wave
A wave is a disturbance that propagates.
Apart from
electromagnetic radiation, and probably
gravitational radiation, which can travel through vacuum, waves have a
medium (which on deformation is capable of producing elastic restoring
forces) through which they travel and can transfer energy from one place to
another without any of the particles of the medium being displaced permanently;
i.e. there is no associated mass transport. Instead, any particular point
oscillates around a fixed position.
A medium is called:
-
linear if different waves at any
particular point in the medium can be added,
-
bounded if it is finite in
extent,otherwise unbounded.
-
uniform if its physical properties are
unchanged at different points,
-
isotropic if its physical properties are
same in different directions.
-
Sea-waves, which are perturbations that propagate through
water (see also
surfing and
tsunami).
-
Sound - a mechanical wave that propagates through air, liquid or solids,
and is of a frequency detected by the
auditory system. Similar are
seismic waves in
earthquakes, of which there are the S, P and L kinds.
-
Light,
radio waves,
x-rays, etc. make up
electromagnetic radiation. In this case propagation is possible without a
medium, through vacuum.
All waves have common behaviour under a number of standard
situations. All waves can experience the following:
-
Reflection - when a wave turns back from the direction it was travelling,
due to hitting a reflective material.
-
Refraction - the change of direction of waves due to them entering a new
medium.
-
Diffraction - the spreading out of waves, for example when they travel
through a small slit.
-
Interference - the addition of two waves that come in to contact with each
other.
-
Dispersion - the splitting up of a wave up depending on frequency.
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When an object bobs up and
down on a
ripple in a pond it experiences an elliptical
trajectory because ripples are not simple
transverse sinusoidal waves |
Transverse waves are those with vibrations perpendicular to the wave's
direction of travel; examples include waves on a string and electromagnetic
waves.
Longitudinal waves are those with vibrations along the wave's direction of
travel; examples include sound waves.
Ripples on the surface of a pond are actually a combination of transverse
and longitudinal waves; therefore, the points on the surface follow elliptical
paths.
Transverse waves can be
polarized. Unpolarised waves can oscillate in any direction in the plane
perpendicular to the direction of travel, while polarized waves oscillate in
only one direction perpendicular to the line of travel.
Waves can be described using a number of standard variables
including:
frequency,
wavelength,
amplitude and
period. The
amplitude of a wave is the measure of the magnitude of the maximum
disturbance in the medium during one wave cycle, and is measured in units
depending on the type of wave. For examples, waves on a string have an amplitude
expressed as a distance (meters), sound waves as pressure (pascals) and
electromagnetic waves as the amplitude of the
electric field (volts/meter). The amplitude may be constant (in which case
the wave is a c.w. or continuous wave) or may vary with time
and/or position. The form of the variation of amplitude is called the
envelope of the wave.
The period (T) is the time for one complete cycle
for an oscillation of a wave. The frequency (F) is how many periods per
unit time (for example one second) and is measured in
hertz. These are related by:
-
.
When waves are expressed mathematically, the
angular frequency (ω, radians/second) is often used; it is
related to the frequency f by:
-
.
Waves that remain in one place are called standing waves
- eg vibrations on a violin string. Waves that are moving are called
travelling waves, and have a disturbance that varies both with time t
and distance z. This can be expressed mathematically as:
y = A(z,t)cos(ωt - kz
+ φ),
where A(z,t) is the amplitude
envelope of the wave, k is the wave number and φ is
the
phase. The velocity v of this wave is given by:
,
where λ is the
wavelength of the wave.
In the most general sense, not all waves are sinusoidal. One
example of a non-sinusoidal wave is a pulse that travels down a rope resting on
the ground. In the most general case, any function of x, y, z, and t that is a
non-trivial solution to the
wave equation is a wave. The
wave equation is a differential equation which describes a harmonic wave
passing through a certain medium. The equation has different forms depending on
how the wave is transmitted, and on what medium. A non-linear wave-equation can
cause mass transport.
The
Schrödinger equation describes the wave-like behaviour of particles in
quantum mechanics. Solutions of this equation are
wave functions which can be used to describe the probability density of a
particle.
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