Can a 28.5Hz Frequency Cause a Standing Wave in a 6m Long String?

In summary: Feel free to open a new thread if you have a question or comment that is more relevant to today's technology.In summary, the conversation discusses a string that is 6.0m long and vibrating at a frequency of 16.5Hz with three loops. The fundamental frequency of the string is 5.5Hz and the speed of the waves in the string is 66m/s. A source frequency of 28.5Hz would not cause a standing wave in the string because it is not a multiple of the fundamental frequency.
  • #1
Codav
4
0
1. A string that is 6.0m long is vibrating with three loops in it. The frequency of the source is 16.5Hz.

What is the fundamental frequency of the string?

What is the speed of the waves in the string?

Explain whether or not a source of frequency of 28.5Hz causes a standing wave in the string.
3. Info: 6m long string. Source frequency is 16.5Hz. There are 3 loops.
Find wavelength:
6m/3=2m
Each loop is 2m.
1 loop is half a wavelength.
λ=2*2
λ=4m
Since the frequency is 16.5Hz with three loops, to find fundamental frequency you just divide by three.
16.5/3=5.5Hz
The fundamental frequency is 5.5Hz
Find speed with velocity equation: v=ƒ*λ
v=16.5*4
v=66m/s
The speed of the waves in the string is 66m/s

A source frequency of 28.5Hz would not cause a standing wave in the string because it is not a multiple of the fundamental frequency 5.5Hz.
28.5Hz/5.5Hz=5.182Hz
 
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  • #2
What's your question? Or do you just want an approval stamp from PF ?
(By the way: I can't find anything wrong with what you write...
except: Hz/Hz is not Hz. The quotiënt is a simple number
:smile:)
 
  • #3
I think your fundamental freq is wrong, you should be dividing speed by wavelength, not number of loops. Doing this returns fundamental freq as 4.125, which is a multiple of the initial freq (16.5).
 
  • #4
Tarragon said:
I think your fundamental freq is wrong, you should be dividing speed by wavelength, not number of loops. Doing this returns fundamental freq as 4.125, which is a multiple of the initial freq (16.5).
This thread is from August 2014. The Original Poster has not logged in since August 27th, 2014. It is therefore highly unlikely that you will get a response from them.

Because of its age and lack of evidence that thee OP has any interest in it, I am closing this thread to further posts.
 

1. What is a wave?

A wave is a disturbance that travels through a medium, transferring energy from one point to another without causing any permanent displacement of the medium itself.

2. How are sound waves and light waves different?

Sound waves are mechanical waves, meaning they require a medium (such as air or water) to travel through. Light waves are electromagnetic waves, meaning they can travel through a vacuum.

3. What is the relationship between frequency and wavelength?

Frequency is the number of waves that pass a given point in one second, while wavelength is the distance between two consecutive peaks or troughs of a wave. The two are inversely related, meaning as frequency increases, wavelength decreases, and vice versa.

4. Can sound waves travel through all materials?

No, sound waves cannot travel through a vacuum. However, they can travel through solids, liquids, and gases, but the speed of sound varies depending on the material.

5. How does the Doppler effect affect waves?

The Doppler effect is the apparent change in frequency of a wave due to relative motion between the source and the observer. This means that a wave's frequency will appear higher if the source is moving towards the observer and lower if the source is moving away.

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