What is Doppler effect: Definition and 505 Discussions

The Doppler effect or Doppler shift (or simply Doppler, when in context) is the change in frequency of a wave in relation to an observer who is moving relative to the wave source. It is named after the Austrian physicist Christian Doppler, who described the phenomenon in 1842.
A common example of Doppler shift is the change of pitch heard when a vehicle sounding a horn approaches and recedes from an observer. Compared to the emitted frequency, the received frequency is higher during the approach, identical at the instant of passing by, and lower during the recession.The reason for the Doppler effect is that when the source of the waves is moving towards the observer, each successive wave crest is emitted from a position closer to the observer than the crest of the previous wave. Therefore, each wave takes slightly less time to reach the observer than the previous wave. Hence, the time between the arrivals of successive wave crests at the observer is reduced, causing an increase in the frequency. While they are traveling, the distance between successive wave fronts is reduced, so the waves "bunch together". Conversely, if the source of waves is moving away from the observer, each wave is emitted from a position farther from the observer than the previous wave, so the arrival time between successive waves is increased, reducing the frequency. The distance between successive wave fronts is then increased, so the waves "spread out".
For waves that propagate in a medium, such as sound waves, the velocity of the observer and of the source are relative to the medium in which the waves are transmitted. The total Doppler effect may therefore result from motion of the source, motion of the observer, or motion of the medium. Each of these effects is analyzed separately. For waves which do not require a medium, such as electromagnetic waves or gravitational waves, only the relative difference in velocity between the observer and the source needs to be considered, giving rise to the relativistic Doppler effect.

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  1. A

    Doppler Effect of a police car

    Homework Statement A speeder is pulling directly AWAY and INCREASING his distance from a police car that is moving at 27 m/s with respect to the ground. The radar gun in the police car emits an electromagnetic wave with a frequency of 7.2 x 109 Hz. The wave reflects from the speeder's car and...
  2. M

    Doppler Effect Submarine Problem

    [SOLVED] Doppler Effect Problem Homework Statement A submarine (sub 1) travels through water at a speed of 8.00 m/s, emitting a sonar wave at a frequency of 1400 Hz. The speed of sound in the water is 1533 m/s. A second submarine (sub 2) is located such that both submarines are traveling...
  3. D

    How Does the Doppler Effect Alter Frequencies of a Moving Whistle?

    A whistle of frequency 577 Hz moves in a circle of radius 73.2 cm at an angular speed of 16.1 rad/s. What are (a) the lowest and (b) the highest frequencies heard by a listener a long distance away, at rest with respect to the center of the circle? (Take the speed of sound in air to be 343 m/s.)...
  4. B

    What is the speed of the bat gaining on its prey in m/s?

    Homework Statement Assume: Take the speed of sound in air to be 341 m/s. A bat, moving at 6.3 m/s, is chasing a flying insect. The bat emits a 47 kHz chirp and receives back an echo at 47.73kHz. At what speed is the bat gaining on its prey? Answer in units of m/s. Homework Equations...
  5. B

    Physics: doppler effect (observer & source in motion)

    Homework Statement A train is moving parallel and adjacent to a highway with a constant speed of 25 m/s. A car, at time t0, is 42 m behind the train, traveling in the same direction as the train at 49 m/s, and accelerating at 4 m/s^2. The train's whistle blows at a frequency of 460Hz. The...
  6. B

    Doppler Effect and absolute simultaneity

    The Doppler shift formula relates two proper time intervals measured in I and I' respectovely (tau)=D(tau)' D representing a Doppler factor that depends on the relative speed of I and I'. By definition the events involved in I and I' respectively take place at the same point in space. If the...
  7. T

    Horsehoe Bats, Insects, Speed and the Doppler Effect

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  8. A

    The Doppler Effect- According to Quantum Mechanics

    I am just beginning to learn about quantum mechanics and I have already come up with a question regarding it. I know that light is absorbed by an electron at once and I know about the doppler shift. Yet is light emitted at once, or gradually? If at once, how could the wavelength be shifted...
  9. T

    How Do You Derive the Doppler Effect for Moving Observers and Sources?

    Homework Statement I have a problem that asks to derive the doppler effect for the two different cases of a moving observer and a moving source. Homework Equations I should get f' = f*(v +/- vo)/(v +/- vs) as my general equation, where f' is the observed frequency and f is the...
  10. M

    Exploring the Doppler Effect: Compression & Complex Formulas

    I have a few questions concerning the Doppler Effect, I know what it is in terms of a moving object, and how speed effects fequency etc. but I'm more interested in the explantions. My actual knowledge of the two explanations is reasonably vague. The one I am interested in is the compression...
  11. 6

    Does the Doppler Effect Double the Color Shift of a Moving Light Source?

    I am having a friendly argument with a friend. If a light source was moving towards a colored object at high speeds in a completely dark area, would the color shift due to the Doppler effect be doubled? Possible theories are no (which we agree is wrong) Yes (which may be right) Or simply...
  12. M

    Doppler effect and Ultrasound waves

    Homework Statement Ultrasound waves are used to measure blood-flow speeds. Suppose a device emits sound at 450 kHz, and the speed of sound in human tissue is taken to be 1540 m/s. What is the expected beat frequency if blood is flowing normally in large leg arteries at 3.0 cm/s directly away...
  13. G

    Doppler Effect (moving source, moving listener)

    Homework Statement A man is traveling on a bicycle at 14 m/s along a straight road that runs parallel to some railroad tracks. He hears the whistle of a train that is behind him. The frequency emitted by the train is 840 Hz, but the frequency the man hears is 778 Hz. Take the velocity of...
  14. B

    Vo = (310 Hz / 340 m/s + 0 m/s) * (340 m/s / 342 Hz)Vo = 0.907 m/s

    Doppler Effect...Ahhhh! Homework Statement A student in a parked car honks the horn, which has a `proper' frequency of 310.00 Hz. An observer in an approaching vehicle measures the frequency of the sound to be 342 Hz. Calculate the speed of the approaching vehicle. Use 340 m/s as the speed of...
  15. B

    How Fast is the Racecar Moving Based on the Doppler Effect?

    Homework Statement The pitch of the sound from a racecar engine drops the musical interval of a fourth when it passes the spectators. This means the frequency of the sound after passing is 0.75 times what it was before. How fast is the racecar moving? 1. 61 m/s 2. 49 m/s 3. 72...
  16. P

    Does Playing the Violin on a Moving Train Demonstrate the Doppler Effect?

    suppose i am moving in a train and at the same time playing a violin .Is the dopller effect/formulae applicable for me
  17. C

    High speed train sounding horn - Doppler effect

    A high speed train is traveling at a speed of 41 m/s when the engineer sounds the 416 Hz warning horn. The speed of sound is 345 m/s. What is the frequency of the sound as perceived by a person standing on at the crossing when the train is leaving? I used the equation: f0=fs/(1-vs/v) f0=416...
  18. A

    What is the fetal heart wall speed in m/s using the Doppler effect?

    Homework Statement A 1.50-MHz sound wave travels through a pregnant woman’s abdomen and is reflected from the fetal heart wall of her unborn baby. The heart wall is moving toward the sound receiver as the heart beats. The reflected sound is then mixed with the transmitted sound, and 85 beats...
  19. C

    Doppler Effect in Circular Motion

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  20. N

    Grade 11 Physics; Doppler Effect.

    Hi, and thank you for your time to read this. I'm having a difficult time figuring out the answer to this question; Q: A porpoise swims toward a school of fish and emits a high pitched sound. The porpoise listens for the echo of its own squeak. I have to predict whether the observer will...
  21. C

    Questions about Doppler Effect

    the formula of Doppler Effect f = fs(v + vd)/(v - vs) (v = speed of sound; d = detector; s = source) Simply from this formula, it can be seen that vd has differenct effect on the frequency receiver from vs. when vd or vs approaches the speed of sound, this difference is pronounced. make...
  22. B

    Acoustic doppler effect at subsonic, sonic and supersonic speeds

    Defining the period measured by a moving observer relative to a stationary source as T=t(n)-t(n-1) where t(n) and t(n-1) represent the times when two successive wavecrests are received respectively, the theory of the Doppler Effect leads zero and negative periods in the case of sonic and...
  23. B

    How Is Redshift Calculated for a Galaxy Moving Away at High Speed?

    Homework Statement A distant galaxy moving away from us at speed 1.85 *10^7 m/s. Calculate the fractional redshift (lambda'-lambda(0))/(lambda(0)) of the light from this galaxy. Homework Equations (lambda'-lambda(0))/(lambda(0))=lambda'/lambda(0)-1; f=(sqrt(1-beta)/sqrt(1+beta))*f(0)...
  24. M

    Doppler effect spectrum of a star

    Homework Statement An astronomer observes a hydrogen line in the spectrum of a star. The wavelength of hydrogen in the laboratory is 6.563 x 10-7m, but the wavelength in the star’s light is measured at 6.56186 x 10-7m. Which of the following explains this discrepancy? A) The star is...
  25. G

    Doppler effect to measure angle, not speed

    DISCLAIMER: i may very well have exactly zero idea what I'm talking about. please feel free to berate me if i am way off base... so i know the doppler effect is normally used to determine an unknown radial velocity, but I'm assuming that if i know the velocity of the source, i can use the...
  26. E

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    Homework Statement You're flying in an aircraft at 46 m/s. An eagle flies directly towards you at 11 m/s. Speeds are relative to ground. The eagle emits a cry at 3400 Hz, and the speed of sound is 330 m/s. What frequency do you hear? Homework Equations f_o = f_s\left(...
  27. E

    Determining Car Speed Using Doppler Effect and Frequency Change

    Homework Statement A parked car's alarm goes off, producing a sound at 961 Hz. As you drive toward, pass, and drive away from this parked car, you observe a frequency change of 98 Hz. At what speed are you driving? (Speed of sound is 343 m/s.) Homework Equations f_o = f_s\left(...
  28. X

    What is the difference between the equations for Doppler effect and relativity?

    Homework Statement Hello, I'm researching about relativity and Doppler effect, most text and book gives the equation for it as (term with square root is on the numerator, and the term w/o is on the denominator) while on some text, has the reverse of the fraction part (which is the...
  29. P

    How Is the Beat Frequency Calculated When a Train Approaches a Station?

    Homework Statement A radio played on a moving train has frequency of 85 Hz. A second radio played at train station is at rest. What is the beat frequency heard if train approaches the station at 10 m/s? Homework Equations f' = [f \ (1-vsource/vsound) I used this equation because the...
  30. moe darklight

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  31. C

    Doppler Effect, Light, and Fan Blades

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  32. O

    Understanding the Doppler Effect: The Red Shift and Our Place in the Universe

    So the Red shift of extragalactic bodies means that they are moving away from us. And this effect is seen for all extra galactic objects minus the local group of galaxies. How then is it known that our local group is not the center of the universe? Wouldn't the fact that everything is moving...
  33. R

    How Does the Doppler Effect Influence Sound Frequency at the Great Wall?

    Hi, I am a little confused about some aspects of sound waves. I was hoping to just check to see if I am on the right track. I have a problem where a guy is moving towards the great wall of china, with a air horn, emitting a constant frequency sound of 500Hz. The sounds is going to hit the...
  34. T

    What Are the Highest and Lowest Frequencies Heard Due to the Doppler Effect?

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  35. R

    Doppler effect Indianapolis 500 problem

    Homework Statement At the Indianapolis 500, you can measure the speed of cars just by listening to the difference in pitch of the engine noise between approaching and receding cars. Suppose the sound of a certain car drops by a factor of 1.50 as it goes by on the straightaway. How fast is it...
  36. A

    Wind will affect the doppler effect?

    Homework Statement Is this true? the observed doppler shift for sound waves depends only on the relative motion of the source and the receiver. Homework Equations this is a concept-like question The Attempt at a Solution If no, doesn't mean, wind will affect the doppler effect?
  37. R

    Doppler effect sensitive parabolic sound collector

    Using a highly sensitive parabolic sound collector, Tom records the frequency of a tuning fork as it drops into the Grand Canyon. He drops the vibrating tuning fork from rest at t=0. He records a frequency of 1887.0 Hz at t=7.880 s. What is the natural frequency of the tuning fork? Use...
  38. L

    Calculating Bat's Velocity Using Doppler Effect

    Assume: Take the speed of sound in air to be 343 m/s. A bat, moving at 5.9 m/s, is chasing a flying insect. The bat emits a 46 kHz chirp and receives back an echo at 46.26 kHz. At what speed is the bat gaining on its prey? Answer in units of m/s. I tried this: f=initial frequency...
  39. K

    Doppler Effect Help: Solving Car Alarm Q with 21.06 m/s Speed

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  40. D

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    Homework Statement Suppose that a police car on the highway is moving to the right at 28 m/s, while a speeder is coming up from almost directly behind at a speed of 34 m/s, both speeds being with respect to the ground. The police officer aims a radar gun at the speeder. Assume that the...
  41. S

    What is the relationship between Doppler Effect and frequency?

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  42. M

    Calculating Frequency of Train Whistle for Approaching Passenger

    A train is traveling at 30.0 m/s relative to the ground in still air. The frequency of the note emitted by the train whistle is 262 Hz. a. What frequency (fapproach) is heard by a passenger on a train moving at a speed of 18.0 m/s relative to the ground in a direction opposite to the first...
  43. N

    Mainstream treatment for relativistic Doppler effect under accelerated motion?

    I would need a pointer to a mainstream treatment of the general relativistic Doppler effect when source and receiver are accelerated wrt each other. Book/paper/wiki . No crank papers , please (i.e. no Apeiron and such). Thank you.
  44. N

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  45. D

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  46. K

    Understanding the Doppler Effect: Using c-v0, c+v0, c+Vs, c-Vs

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  47. D

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  48. V

    Doppler effect star and earth question

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  49. S

    Does Motion Affect Frequency in Sound Waves?

    Hello, The reason for the shifting of freqeuncies of all types of waves in response to relative motion away or towards the center of propagation, is caused by a corresponding stretching or compressing of the medium, correct? I mean for sound, if one moves toward the place where the sound...
  50. Q

    What causes a sonic boom when traveling at Mach 1+?

    Here's a problem that's been bugging me. We know that we get sonic booms because of the Doppler effect since, for an example, the jetplane over takes the soundwaves that it emits some time ago because it is travels faster than the speed of sound. The overlapping of new sound waves it produce...
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