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Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week.

Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

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Page 1: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Day 6Exam I is on Thursday.

Be sure to attend lab this week.

Page 2: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

ReviewReview Use the review sheet online.

Work out the online quiz.

Read the chapters and review the homework.

Page 3: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Beats - the periodic variation in loudness of two sounds played together

The beat frequency is equal to the difference in the frequency of the two sounds.

What is the beat frequency when a 262 Hz and a 266 Hz tuning fork are sounded together?

BeatsBeats

Page 4: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Radio Broadcasts Modulation - an impression of the sound wave on a

higher frequency radio wave

AM • Amplitude Modulation• 535 kHz to 1605 kHz

FM • Frequency Modulation• 88 MHz to 108 MHz

Page 5: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week
Page 6: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Chapter 21

Musical Sounds

Page 7: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Noise Versus Music

What is the difference between noise and music?

• Answer: The appearance of the waveform.

Mac Mic

Page 8: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

NOISE VERSUS MUSIC

Page 9: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Pitch... … is the "highness" or "lowness" of a tone.

Pitch corresponds to frequency.

Concert A on the Musical Scale has a frequency of 440 Hertz.

Page 10: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Major Scale Letter Frequency FrequencyNote Name (Hz) ratio Interval

do C 264 9/8 Wholere D 297 10/9 Wholemi E 330 16/15 Halffa F 352 9/8 Wholesol G 396 10/9 Wholela A 440 9/8 Wholeti B 495 16/15 Halfdo C 528

Page 11: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Quality...

…is the characteristic sound that allows us to distinguish between two musical instruments.

Page 12: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Same Note - Different Instrument

Page 13: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Harmonic

• a partial tone that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency

Fundamental Frequency

• the lowest frequency of vibration

• a.k.a. the first harmonic

Page 14: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Harmonics Harmonics on a Guitar String

Harmonics in an Organ Pipe

• Open on one end, close on the other

• Open on both ends

Page 15: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

BackBack

Page 16: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Fourier Analysis... …is a mathematical method that will

resolve any periodic wave form into a series of simple sine waves.

See Figure 20.9.

Page 17: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

BackBack

Page 18: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

BackBack

Page 19: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week
Page 20: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Sound Intensity and Loudness

Intensity of Sound

• refers to the amplitude of the pressure variations in the sound wave

Page 21: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Loudness

• the physiological sensation directly related to the sound intensity

• measured in bels

• 1bels = 10 decibels

Page 22: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Loudness

• A sound of 10 decibels is or 101 or 10 times as intense as 0 decibels.

• 20 decibels is 102 or 100 times the intensity 0 decibels.

• How much more intense is sound at 100 dB than sound at 50 dB? –Answer: 100000 times

Page 23: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Source of Sound Loudness (db)

Threshold of Hearing 0

Conversation 60

Ear Damage Begins 85

Amplified Music 110

Jet Airplane at 30 meters 140

Page 24: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Review Questions

Page 25: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Day 7

Exam I is on Tuesday.

Page 26: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

BackBack

Page 27: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

COMPACT DISCS

Phonograph players give analog signals.

Digital signal is in binary code.

CD has flats and pits and is sampled 44,100 times

per second.

Page 28: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

1. The quality of a musical note can be changed by simply playing the note on a different instrument.

(a) True(b) False

Page 29: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

2. The three characteristics of a musical tone

are loudness, quality, and timbre.

(a) True

(b) False

Page 30: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

3. Frequencies of sound that are too high for the human ear to hear are called...(a) faster than the speed of sound

(b) supersonic

(c) infrasonic

(d) ultrasonic

(e) subsonic(d) ultrasonic

Page 31: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

4. For the same temperature for air, does sound travel faster in humid Galveston or in dry El Paso?

(a) Galveston

(b) El Paso

(c) same speed in either city

(a) Galveston

Page 32: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

5. The bending of sound through air of uneven temperature is called

(a) reflection

(b) refraction

(c) interference

(d) reverberation

(e) resonance

(b) refraction

Page 33: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

6. Lightning is seen, then ten seconds later thunder is heard. Approximately, how far away in meters is the thunder cloud? (a) 10,500 m

(b) 5280 m

(c) 1050 m

(d) 3400 m

(e) 680 m

(d) 3400 m

Page 34: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

7. A 250 Hz tuning fork and a 260 Hz tuning fork are vibrating near each other. How many beats per second are heard?(a) 255(b) 510(c) 10(d) 250(e) 260

(c) 10

Page 35: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

End of Section...

Page 36: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

URL - Animated Vibrating String

Demo - Harmonics on a Guitar

Demo - Organ Pipe

URL - Animated Organ Pipe

Page 37: Day 6 Exam I is on Thursday. Be sure to attend lab this week

Common Sound IntensitiesSource of Sound Intensity (W/m2) Sound Level (db)

Jet 30 m away 102 140

Air-raid siren, nearby 1 120

Disco music, amplified 10-1 110

Riveter 10-3 90

Busy street traffic 10-5 70

Conversation in home 10-6 60

Quiet radio in home 10-8 40

Whisper 10-10 20

Rustle of leaves 10-11 10

Threshold of hearing 10-12 0