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Waves: Oscillations and Traveling Waves

This document contains a practice assessment with 80 multiple choice and short answer questions about waves. The questions cover topics including oscillations, traveling waves, wave characteristics, reflection, refraction, interference, polarization, and their applications. The assessment includes diagrams of waves and oscillating systems, and requires students to calculate values like amplitude, wavelength, frequency, speed, and angles of reflection and refraction. It also asks students to sketch waves, mark points of maximum velocity and acceleration, and indicate compressions and rarefactions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
883 views10 pages

Waves: Oscillations and Traveling Waves

This document contains a practice assessment with 80 multiple choice and short answer questions about waves. The questions cover topics including oscillations, traveling waves, wave characteristics, reflection, refraction, interference, polarization, and their applications. The assessment includes diagrams of waves and oscillating systems, and requires students to calculate values like amplitude, wavelength, frequency, speed, and angles of reflection and refraction. It also asks students to sketch waves, mark points of maximum velocity and acceleration, and indicate compressions and rarefactions.

Uploaded by

Paul Amezquita
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Topic 4 Waves

Formative Assessment
PROBLEM SET
NAME:
________________________________ TEAM:__
THIS IS A PRACTICE ASSESSMENT. Show formulas, substitutions, answers, and units!
Topic 4.1 Oscillations
A mass is attached to a horizontal spring. If displaced from equilibrium and
released, the mass takes 0.25 seconds to return to its original position.
1. The mass is pulled 4.0 cm in the positive xdirection before release, as shown. What
are the amplitude, period, and frequency of
the oscillation?
2. An identical system is started by pushing
the mass 4.0 cm in the negative xdirection. It is released at the same instant
the mass in problem 1 is released. What is
the phase difference between the two systems?
The following questions are about a clock. The radius of the minute hand
on the clock is 7.0 cm.
3. What are the period and the frequency of the minute hand?
4. What is the speed (in cm s-1) of the tip of the minute hand?
A 4.00-kg mass is shown in the mass/spring
system at its starting release point. The spring
constant of the spring is 0.250 Nm-1. The grid is
marked off in 1.00 cm intervals.
5. In the picture place a V at all the points where the speed of the mass will be at
its maximum.
6. In the picture place an A at all the points where the acceleration of the mass
will be at its maximum.
7. What is the proportionality constant for this particular system that relates a to x
in the proportion a -x that defines SHM?
8. What is the acceleration (in cm s-2) of the mass at x = - 2.00 cm?
9. What is the acceleration (in cm s-2) of the mass at x = + 1.00 cm?
[Link] is the force (in N) acting on the mass at x = + 1.00 cm?
The displacement vs. time of
a 2.5-kg mass attached to a

spring having a spring constant of 0.125 Nm -1 undergoing SHM is shown in the


graph.
[Link] is the amplitude of its motion?
[Link] is the total energy of the system?
[Link] is position of the mass at t = 2.75 s?
[Link] is the potential energy stored in the system at t = 2.75 s?
[Link] is velocity of the mass at t = 2.75 s?
[Link] is acceleration of the mass at t = 2.75 s?
[Link] the graph above, sketch in the velocity of the mass vs. time, and label it V.
[Link] the graph above, sketch in the acceleration vs. time and label it A.
The displacement vs. time of a
particle undergoing SHM is
shown in the graph to the right.
[Link] the graph, sketch in the
displacement vs. time for inphase SHM with exactly half
the amplitude of the given
SHM.
[Link] the graph above, sketch in the displacement vs. time for SHM that is exactly
T/ 6 out of phase.
[Link] many degrees is this phase angle? How many radians?
The kinetic energy vs. displacement of a 1.25-kg
particle undergoing SHM on a mass-spring system is
shown in the graph to the right.
[Link] is the maximum speed of the mass?
[Link] is the maximum potential energy stored in
the mass-spring system?
[Link] is the spring constant of the spring that is
driving the oscillation?
[Link] the graph, sketch in the potential energy vs. displacement of the oscillating
system.
26. At x = 0.65 cm, what is the potential energy stored in the system?

[Link] x = 0.65 cm, what is the kinetic energy of the mass? What is its speed?
In the graph to the right, the spring force vs.
displacement is shown for the spring in an oscillating
mass-spring system. The mass is 0.25 kg and the
amplitude of motion is 1.0 m.
[Link] is the value of the spring constant?
[Link] is the total energy of the system.
[Link] can you tell that the oscillation is that of SHM?
[Link] is the maximum speed of the mass?
[Link] is the acceleration of the mass when it is traveling at its maximum speed?
[Link] is the maximum acceleration of the mass?
[Link] is the speed of the mass when the displacement is x = -0.50 m?
Topic 4.2 Traveling waves
[Link] is the difference between a transverse and a longitudinal traveling wave?
[Link] what compressions and rarefactions are, and what type of traveling wave
has these characteristics.
[Link] what wavefronts and rays are, in terms of longitudinal waves.
[Link] what crests and troughs are, and what kind of traveling wave has these
characteristics.
[Link] kind of oscillation are the particles of a medium carrying a traveling wave
undergoing?
[Link] how you could make a traveling wave appear to move through a set of
identical hanging mass-spring systems all lined up in a row. Make a sketch to
illustrate and clarify your explanation. Be sure to talk about amplitude, phase
and period.
Twelve identical mass-spring combos are lined up and
set to oscillation. Two pictures of the same system
taken at different times are shown to the right. The
crest-to-crest distance is 8.0 cm, and the maximum
displacement of all of the masses is 1.5 cm.
[Link] how you can tell that a traveling wave is
present.

[Link] direction is the wave traveling? Be sure to justify your response with a
reasoned explanation.
[Link] an estimate of the period of the oscillation of each mass.
[Link] is the frequency of the traveling wave?
[Link] are the amplitude and the wavelength of the traveling wave?
[Link] is the wave speed?
Consider the wave train being transmitted through the spring as shown. The
accompanying graph shoes the motion of a single loop
of the spring as it moves back and forth in SHM.

CM

[Link] the picture place a C at each center of a compression. In the picture place an
R at each center of a rarefaction.
[Link] is the frequency of the wave train?
[Link] is the wavelength (in cm) of the wave train?
[Link] is the wave speed (in cm s-1)?
A
traveling
wave
has
displacement y vs. time shown
in Graph 1 and displacement y
vs. horizontal position x in
Graph 2.
[Link] are the amplitude and
the period of the traveling
wave?
[Link] are the wavelength and the wave speed of the traveling wave?
A
longitudinal
wave
has
displacement x vs. time shown
for a single particle in Graph 1
and
displacement
x
vs.
horizontal position d for a

particular instant in Graph 2. Graph 3 shows 5 particles in the longitudinal wave at


their equilibrium position.
[Link] each of the 5 particles, in Graph 3 (below) place an reflecting the particles
positions at the instant depicted in Graph 2.
d/
0.
30 cm
10
20
00
.
.
.
[Link] Graph 3 place an R at the center of a rarefaction. At what d value or values
in
Graph 3 do you predict there is a center of a compression?
Graph 3

The displacement y vs. time t graph of a light wave


is shown.
[Link] the frequency of the light. What portion of
the electromagnetic spectrum does this place
this light?
[Link] the wavelength of the light.
[Link] why you dont need a displacement vs.
distance graph for light, but you do for other traveling waves?
Topic 4.3 Wave characteristics
[Link] the wavefronts in each picture. In the circular
waves sketch in the wave rays. What type of waves
are these all examples of?

[Link] the wavefronts and rays. What type of wave


is illustrated?
60.A 675 watt speaker projects sound in a
spherical wave. Find the intensity of the
sound at a distance of 2.0 m and 8.0 m
from the speaker.

At a distance of 27.5 m from a sound source the intensity is 4.25 10 -1 W m-2.


[Link] its intensity at a distance of 15.5 m.
[Link] the amplitudes of the sound at 27.5 m and 15.5 m.

A traveling wave having a wave speed of 325 m s-1 strikes a


boundary between two mediums with an angle of incidence
of 25. Some of the waves energy is reflected at the
boundary, and some of it is transmitted through the boundary
and into the second medium, where its speed is reduced to
245 m s-1.
[Link] the normal, and the angle of incidence in the diagram.
[Link] the angle of reflection and sketch the reflected ray.
[Link] the refracted ray.
A traveling wave whose wavefronts are shown strikes a
boundary between two mediums as shown. The frequency of
the incident wave is 50 Hz, and the wavelength is 0.85 m.
The angle of incidence is 23 and the angle of refraction is
26.
[Link] the wavefronts of the refracted wave.
[Link] does the frequency of the refracted wave compare to that of the incident
wave?
[Link] does the wavelength of the refracted wave compare to that of the incident
wave?
[Link] does the wave speed of the refracted wave compare to that of the incident
wave?
70.A wave pulse is approaches a fixed
point in a string. Sketch in the pulse
shape after reflection.
[Link] wave pulses approach each other
from opposite directions as shown.
Sketch the waveform when the trailing
edge of Pulse A and the leading edge
of Pulse B are coincident.
Two traveling waves reach a point in the medium at the
same time and act simultaneously on it. The top graph
shows the two waves.
[Link] the bottom graph make an accurate sketch of the
points displacement vs. time as a result of the two
waves. The time axes are the same.
The following questions are about polarization and
polarized light.
[Link] what is meant by polarized light.

[Link] polarization by reflection.


[Link] Brewsters law.
[Link] light in air is reflected from a liquid surface in such a way that it is
completely polarized. The angle of incidence is 48. What is the angle of
refraction in the liquid?
[Link] the terms polarizer and analyzer.
78. Two disks of Polaroid are aligned so that they polarize light in the same plane.
Calculate the angle through which one sheet needs to be turned in order to
reduce the amplitude of the observed E-field to one-third of its original value.
[Link] the initial intensity was I0, what will the new intensity be (at the angle you just
calculated)?
[Link] we want the intensity to be one-third of its original value, what must be the
angle through which one of the sheets is turned.
[Link] what is meant by an optically active substance.
[Link] the use of polarization in the determination of the concentration of
certain solutions.
[Link] qualitatively how polarization may be used in stress analysis.
[Link] light of intensity I0 is incident on an analyzer. The transmission axis of
the analyzer makes an angle with the direction of the electric field of the light
waves entering it. Sketch a graph to show the variation of the intensity of the
light transmitted through the analyzer as changes from 0 to 270.
85.A ray of plane-polarized light of intensity 8.5 Wm -2 is normally incident on a
polarizing filter. The intensity of the transmitted light is 5.6 Wm -2. Calculate the
angle between the plane of the polarized light and the preferred plane of the
filter.
Topic 4.4 Wave behavior
A light wave traveling in air strikes a piece of glass as shown.
The frequency of the incident wave is 5.1 1014 Hz. The angle of
incidence is 28 and the angle of refraction is 22.
[Link] the speed of light in the glass.
[Link] the index of refraction of the glass.
[Link] the wavelength of the incident light wave.
[Link] the frequency and wavelength of the refracted light wave.

[Link] the wavefronts for both the incident and reflected light.
[Link] is the critical angle of the light once it is inside the glass?
[Link] is the critical angle of the light once it is inside the glass if the glass is
submerged in water?
The incident wave train pictured in the lower half of the
photograph has an amplitude of 7 cm. Assume the wave
energy is not lost in passing through the two gaps in the
barrier wall. The lightest-colored portions in the upper half of
the photograph are the highest regions of water.
The
darkest-colored portions are the lowest regions of water. For
the following questions, heights are to be referenced to
equilibrium, which is 0 cm.
[Link] Huygens principle.
[Link] will be the height of the lightest-colored portions of the waves in the upper
half of the photograph?
[Link] will be the height of the darkest-colored portions of the waves in the upper
half of the photograph?
[Link] a small circle at a single point of your choosing that shows constructive
interference.
The
following
questions
concern
path
difference in waves.
[Link] sources S1 and S2 each produce
coherent vibrations in water having a
wavelength of 6 m and an amplitude of 10
cm. Three surrounding points are shown.
The lines connecting
the sources to the
points
show
the
distance the points are
from
the
sources.
Complete the table:

[Link] does the term coherent mean in the context of waves?


The interference patterns caused by two
coherent wave sources are shown to the right.

Four reference lines are shown in the medium representing constructive and
destructive interference.
[Link] the lines representing path differences of PD = 1, PD = 2, PD = 1.5,
and PD = 2.5.
The following questions are about Youngs double-slit diffraction.
100. Coherent light having a wavelength of 975 nm is incident on an opaque card
having two vertical slits separated by 0.250 mm. A screen is located 5.25 m
away from the card. What is the distance between the central maximum and the
first maximum?
101. Coherent light of an unknown frequency is projected onto a double-slit with slit
separation 0.125 mm onto a screen that is 12.6 meters away. The separation
between the central maximum and the nearest maximum is 1.20 cm. What is
the frequency of the incident light?
The following questions are about wave behavior.
102. What behavior of waves causes the straight waves to become curved waves
when they pass through the gaps in the barrier?
103. What behavior of waves causes the curved waves to produce the highs and
lows previously calculated?
Topic 4.5 Standing waves
The following questions are about the creation of standing waves.
104. What does it mean for two waves to be coherent?
105. How are standing waves created? Why are they called standing waves?
106. What are nodes and antinodes in the context of standing waves?
The following questions are about a string fixed at
both ends.
107. Sketch the 3rd harmonic standing wave in the
string.
108. If the speed of sound in the string is 1100 m s-1 and length of the string is 16 m,
what is the frequency of the third harmonic of the string?
109. What is the fundamental frequency of this string?
The following questions are about a pipe closed at one
end.
110. Sketch the 3rd harmonic standing wave in this pipe:

111. If the speed of sound in air is 340 m s-1 and the length of the pipe is 16 m, what
is the fundamental frequency of the pipe?
The following questions are about a pipe open at both
ends.
112. Sketch the 3rd harmonic standing wave in this pipe:
113. If the speed of sound in air is 340 m s-1 and the length of the pipe is 16 m, what
is the fundamental frequency of the pipe?
The following questions are about a telephone pole having standing
waves generated in its length by prevailing winds.
114. If the length of the pole exposed above the ground is 25 m,
what is its fundamental frequency? The speed of sound through
the pole is 75 ms-1.
115. What is its third harmonic?
116. Explain how an oscillating telephone pole is similar to an
oscillating tuning fork.

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