Year 11 Physics Notes: Unit 1.1: The Wave Model
Year 11 Physics Notes: Unit 1.1: The Wave Model
Year 11 Physics Notes: Unit 1.1: The Wave Model
The wavefront can either be the crest or trough and is perpendicular to the
direction of the wave's velocity.
Two waves are in phase if at an instant they have the same displacement
and velocity
The amplitude is the maximum displacement from the undisturbed state.
The frequency is the no. of waves that passed a fixed point per second.
The velocity of a wave is how fast the wave transfers energy away.
o
The period is the time it takes a single wave to pass a fixed point
o
When a wave travels through a medium, the medium does not move
forward with the disturbance, the particles simply move up and down
perpendicular to the wave direction. It is simply a transfer of energy.
Waves may travel in one, two or three dimensions e.g. slinky or rope
waves are 1D, ripple waves are 2D and sound waves are 3D(radiates in a
sphere from the origin)
Unit
1.3:
Types of Waves
Waves are categorised according to how they transfer energy:
EM waves travel at the speed of light and can be reflected, refracted and
carry information as codes
They are self-propagating, that is the magnetic field produced induces an
electric field and vice versa etc.
EM waves can travel immense distances and create an electrical response in
the medium they come in contact with
Mobile Phones
Sound waves from separate sources may interfere with each other to
produce a sound of higher or lower amplitude by adding the amplitudes
together.
If two waves are in phase the amplitudes are added to make a louder sound.
This is called superposition.
If two waves with the same amplitude are out of phase by 180 degrees,
they cancel out resulting in no sound. This is called annulment.
If two waves are out of phase, the amplitude will be less than either of the
original waves. Conversely, if they are in phase the amplitude will be
greater than either of the original waves.
Beats
As waves drift out of phase, the resulting amplitude will decrease reaching
zero and then increase again as they drift back in phase.
Beats refer to the variation in volume of a sound that occurs when two
sounds of slightly different frequencies occur together.
Radio waves
o Wavelengths 10cm - 1000m
o Frequencies are categorized as AM, FM, VHF and UHF
Microwaves
o Wavelengths 1mm - 30cm
o Transmission can travel distances of up to 100km but there must be a
direct line of sight from transmitter to receiver as they travel in straight
lines
Infra-red radiation
o Wavelengths 700nm - 1mm
o Detected by electronic detectors
Visible light
o Wavelength 400 - 700nm
Ultraviolet
o Wavelength 10 - 400nm
o Small doses encourages production of vitamin D
o Large doses lead to cell and tissue damage and develop skin cancer,
most harmful radiation is absorbed by the atmosphere
o Detected by UV detectors
X-rays
o Wavelength 0.01 - 10nm
o Used for medical examination of dense parts of the body
o Can be detected by photographic film
Gamma rays
o Wavelengths less than 0.01nm
o Treatment of some cancers
o Detected with a Geiger counter
The government restricts the range of frequencies and limits the bandwidth
over which certain communication devices can operate. This is done to:
o Avoid interferences
o Provide equity for users because the communication industry is very
competitive
o Enable communications for the safety infrastructure
o Allow development of new technologies that require spectrum
bandwidth
A wave that carries exactly the same amount of energy continuously does
not carry information.
There are two simple ways to vary a wave to add information to it. You
either vary the frequency (and hence wavelength and energy) of the wave
or you vary the amplitude (and hence energy) of the wave.
The process of adding the signal information to an electromagnetic wave is
called modulation.
The modulated wave that makes up the signal must then be converted back
into information you can use. That process is called demodulation.
AM
FM
Modulation of Microwaves
Microwaves are preferred over longer wavelength radio waves for mobile
telephone systems because:
o The electromagnetic spectrum is limited and the microwave bandwidth
has the capacity available
o Microwaves don't spread out as much allowing more energy to reach
the receivers
o The large range of frequencies in the microwave transmission range
allows a large number of signals to be transmitted at once i.e. up to
20000 telephone calls can be transmitted at once
Light modulation is also used to carry signals e.g. laser light transmission
but is very susceptible to interference.
As such, long distance communication via light is accomplished along fibreoptic cables
Radar
o
o
If the object is moving away from the source the wavelengths will be
lengthened as a result of collision and reflection
If the object is moving towards the source, the reflected wavelengths
are shorter.
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