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Chapter 20 Sound

20 clicker questions

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Page 1: 20 clicker questions

Chapter 20

Sound

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The sound waves that most humans cannot hear are

a. infrasonic.b. ultrasonic.c. Both of these.d. None of the above, for young people can hear

both.

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The sound waves that most humans cannot hear are

a. infrasonic.b. ultrasonic.c. Both of these.d. None of the above, for young people can hear

both.

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Sound travels in air by a series of

a. compressions.b. rarefactions.c. Both of these.d. None of these.

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Sound travels in air by a series of

a. compressions.b. rarefactions.c. Both of these.d. None of these.

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The vibrations set up in a radio loudspeaker have the same frequencies

as the vibrations

a. in the electric signal feeding the loudspeaker.b. that produce the sound you hear.c. Both of these.d. None of these.

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The vibrations set up in a radio loudspeaker have the same frequencies

as the vibrations

a. in the electric signal feeding the loudspeaker.b. that produce the sound you hear.c. Both of these.d. None of these.

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Sound travels in

a. solids.b. liquids.c. gases.d. All of these.

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Sound travels in

a. solids.b. liquids.c. gases.d. All of these.

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In which of these materials does sound travel fastest?

a. Airb. Waterc. Steeld. All the same at the same temperature

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In which of these materials does sound travel fastest?

a. Airb. Waterc. Steeld. All the same at the same temperature

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The speed of sound varies with

a. amplitude.b. frequency.c. temperature.d. All of these.

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The speed of sound varies with

a. amplitude.b. frequency.c. temperature.d. All of these.

Explanation: Although loudness varies with amplitude, and pitch varies with frequency, speed is not influenced by amplitude nor frequency. A listener in the back row at a concert would find music confusing if sound of different frequencies reached the ear at different times.

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The loudness of a sound is most closely related to its

a. frequency.b. period.c. wavelength.d. amplitude.

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The loudness of a sound is most closely related to its

a. frequency.b. period.c. wavelength.d. amplitude.

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Sound made to undergo reverberation is sound that is

a. sympathetically vibrating.b. varying in tone.c. multiply reflected.d. refracted.

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Sound made to undergo reverberation is sound that is

a. sympathetically vibrating.b. varying in tone.c. multiply reflected.d. refracted.

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When sound undergoes refraction, it undergoes a change in

a. frequency.b. wavelength.c. speed.d. intensity.

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When sound undergoes refraction, it undergoes a change in

a. frequency.b. wavelength.c. speed.d. intensity.

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Sound can NOT be

a. reflected.b. absorbed.c. diminished by interference.d. None of these.

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Sound can NOT be

a. reflected.b. absorbed.c. diminished by interference.d. None of these.

Comment: Sound, like any wave, can undergo all of these!

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Sensing an invisible object by way of ultrasound is used by

a. bats.b. dolphinsc. medical doctors.d. All of these.

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Sensing an invisible object by way of ultrasound is used by

a. bats.b. dolphinsc. medical doctors.d. All of these.

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Sound normally travels farther in air when the sound is

a. low frequency.b. high frequency.c. resonant.d. low in energy.

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Sound normally travels farther in air when the sound is

a. low frequency.b. high frequency.c. resonant.d. low in energy.

Explanation: Hence the low tone of fog horns.

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A factory floor vibrates, and as a result you vibrate when standing on the floor.

This is

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. diffraction.

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A factory floor vibrates, and as a result you vibrate when standing on the floor.

This is

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. diffraction.

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When you tap various objects, they produce characteristic sounds that are

related to

a. wavelength.b. amplitude.c. period.d. natural frequency.

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When you tap various objects, they produce characteristic sounds that are

related to

a. wavelength.b. amplitude.c. period.d. natural frequency.

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When the surface of a guitar is made to vibrate, we say it undergoes

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. amplitude enhancement.

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When the surface of a guitar is made to vibrate, we say it undergoes

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. amplitude enhancement.

Comment: The sound may be enhanced, but it is the surface of the guitar that undergoes forced vibration.

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When an object is set vibrating by a wave having a frequency that matches

the natural frequency of the object, what occurs is

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. amplitude enhancement.

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When an object is set vibrating by a wave having a frequency that matches

the natural frequency of the object, what occurs is

a. forced vibration.b. resonance.c. refraction.d. amplitude enhancement.

Comment: Resonance, rather than amplitude enhancement, is the better answer.

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Noise-canceling devices such as jackhammer earphones make use of

sound

a. destruction.b. interference.c. resonance.d. amplification.

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Noise-canceling devices such as jackhammer earphones make use of

sound

a. destruction.b. interference.c. resonance.d. amplification.

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The phenomenon of beats is the result of sound

a. destruction.b. interference.c. resonance.d. amplification.

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The phenomenon of beats is the result of sound

a. destruction.b. interference.c. resonance.d. amplification.

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When a 134-Hz tuning fork and a 144-Hz tuning fork are struck, the

beat frequency is

a. 2 Hz.b. 6 Hz.c. 8 Hz.d. more than 8 Hz.

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When a 134-Hz tuning fork and a 144-Hz tuning fork are struck, the

beat frequency is

a. 2 Hz.b. 6 Hz.c. 8 Hz.d. more than 8 Hz.

Explanation: The beat frequency is the difference between the two, 10 Hz (which is more than 8 Hz).

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When your radio set is tuned to an incoming radio signal, what occurs?

a. Forced vibrationb. Resonancec. Refractiond. Diffraction

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When your radio set is tuned to an incoming radio signal, what occurs?

a. Forced vibrationb. Resonancec. Refractiond. Diffraction