This MCQ module is based on: Speed Waves String Gas
Speed Waves String Gas
This assessment will be based on: Speed Waves String Gas
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Speed Waves String Gas
14.4 The Speed of a Travelling Wave
The speed of a wave depends on the properties of the medium in which it propagates, not on properties of the source. A wave speeds up if the medium is more "elastic" (stiffer) or less dense.
14.5 Speed of a Transverse Wave on a Stretched String
For a string under tension T with linear mass density μ (mass per unit length, kg/m), the transverse wave speed is:
The elastic property is the tension T (a higher T snaps the string back faster); the inertial property is μ (heavier strings respond slower).
14.6 Speed of a Longitudinal Wave (Sound)
Sound is a longitudinal pressure wave. In any medium of bulk modulus B and density ρ:
For solids, the relevant elastic modulus is Young's modulus Y for thin rods:
| Medium | Speed of sound (m/s) |
|---|---|
| Air (0°C) | 331 |
| Air (20°C) | 343 |
| Helium (0°C) | 972 |
| Hydrogen (0°C) | 1284 |
| Water (20°C) | 1482 |
| Iron | 5130 |
| Diamond | 12,000 |
14.6.1 Newton's Formula
Newton (1687) assumed that sound propagation is an isothermal process — heat exchange keeps temperature constant. For an ideal gas under isothermal conditions, the bulk modulus equals the pressure: B_iso = P. So:
For air at STP (P = 1.013×10⁵ Pa, ρ = 1.29 kg/m³): v_Newton ≈ 280 m/s. But experiments showed v_exp ≈ 332 m/s — a 16% discrepancy. Something was wrong.
14.6.2 Laplace's Correction
In 1816 Laplace pointed out that sound oscillations are too rapid for heat to flow in and out — the process is actually adiabatic, not isothermal. For an adiabatic process in an ideal gas: PV^γ = constant, giving B_adi = γP where γ = C_p/C_v is the ratio of specific heats.
14.6.3 Effect of Temperature
Using ideal gas law PV = nRT and ρ = nM/V:
So v ∝ √T (in kelvin). Empirically, sound speed in air increases by ~0.6 m/s for every 1°C rise. At 20°C → 343 m/s; at 30°C → 349 m/s.
14.6.4 Effect of Humidity and Pressure
Sound speed is independent of pressure for an ideal gas at constant temperature (because P/ρ stays constant). It does depend on humidity: water vapour is lighter than dry air, so humid air has lower ρ → faster sound. This is why monsoon afternoons sound "alive" with slightly faster echoes.
Interactive Simulation: String Wave Speed Calculator
Adjust the tension and linear density to see how the wave speed changes on a string.
v = 100.0 m/s
Worked Example 1: Sitar string speed
A sitar string of mass 0.5 g/cm is under tension 200 N. Find the speed of transverse waves on it.
Worked Example 2: Speed of sound in air at 30°C
Speed of sound at 0°C is 332 m/s. Find the speed at 30°C.
Worked Example 3: Sound in helium vs air
Compare speed of sound in helium (M = 4 g/mol, γ = 1.67) to air (M = 29 g/mol, γ = 1.40) at the same temperature.
Materials: Tuning fork (known frequency), tall glass cylinder, water reservoir at adjustable height.
- Strike the tuning fork and hold above the cylinder.
- Raise/lower water level until the sound becomes loudest (first resonance).
- Note water-level height. Continue raising until next loudest (second resonance).
- Difference between the two heights ≈ λ/2.
- Calculate v = νλ.
Around 346 m/s for room temperature. The standard set-up gets within 1-2 m/s of textbook value. The first resonance occurs at length ≈ λ/4 (end correction adds ~0.6r for tube radius r). Subtracting end-correction effects, two successive resonances differ by exactly λ/2.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. Speed of a transverse wave on a stretched string depends on:L1 Remember
Q2. The actual speed of sound in air matches Newton's formula well at sub-audio frequencies (e.g., a slowly moving piston) but fails at audible frequencies. Explain why.L4 Analyse
Q3. Fill in the blank: When temperature rises by 1°C, speed of sound in air increases by approximately ____ m/s.L1 Remember
Q4. True/False: Sound travels faster in humid air than in dry air.L5 Evaluate
Q5. HOT: Design a low-cost method to estimate the bulk modulus of water using sound, given access to a swimming pool, two divers, a stopwatch, and an underwater hammer.L6 Create
Assertion–Reason Questions
(A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R does NOT explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: Newton's formula for the speed of sound in air gives a value lower than the experimental one.
R: Newton assumed sound propagation in air is an adiabatic process.
A: Speed of sound in a gas is independent of pressure at constant temperature.
R: Both P and ρ change together for an ideal gas under isothermal pressure change, keeping P/ρ constant.
A: Tightening a guitar string raises its pitch.
R: Wave speed v = √(T/μ) increases with tension, and higher v on a fixed-length string gives higher fundamental frequency.