Measurement of The Speed of Sound in Air Apparatus
Measurement of The Speed of Sound in Air Apparatus
Apparatus
1000 ml graduated cylinder, resonance tubes of various diameters, set of tuning forks in
the frequency range 256 Hz to 512 Hz, vernier callipers, metre stick, retort stand, clamp
and wooden block.
Procedure
Precautions:
Ensure that the experiment starts at the smallest length and gets longer to
ensure that the fundamental frequency is gotten (sic)
Allow for the correction factor as mentioned in point 7 above.
Repeat the internal diameter three times in order to get an average.
Repeat the experiment a number of times with different resonance tubes in
order to get an average.
Measure lengths in mm in order to reduce length percentage error.
Avoid parallax errors when reading lengths.
Ensure that the vernier callipers is set to zero before use.
Results
Problematic Question 1:
If you do not get the fundamental frequency, then you can not use the formula
c = 4f(l1 + 0.3d).
Hence λ = 4/3 l2
Hence c = fλ becomes
A tuning fork is set vibrating over a resonance tube which can be varied from 0 cm
to 110 cm in length. At what lengths would you expect to find the resonance if the
tuning fork has a frequency of 425Hz and the speed of sound is 340ms-1. (12)
First Position:
c = fλ
L1 = ¼λ meaning 4L1 = λ
L1 = c / 4f
Second Position:
c = fλ
L2 = ¾ λ meaning 4/3 L2 = λ
L2 = 3c / 4f
Third Position:
c = fλ
L3 = 5c / 4f
L3 = (5)340 / 4(425) = 1m
The above question should make you understand why pipes open at one end only have
odd harmonics.
If it doesn’t you will need to bring it to my attention.
At this stage, you should include diagrams of the three different pipes involved above.