The speed of sound is the distance travelled per unit of time by a sound wave as it propagates through an elastic medium. At 20 °C (68 °F), the speed of sound in air is about 343 metres per second (1,235 km/h; 1,125 ft/s; 767 mph; 667 kn), or a kilometre in 2.9 s or a mile in 4.7 s. It depends strongly on temperature as well as the medium through which a sound wave is propagating. At 0°C/32°F, the speed-of-sound is 1192 km/h, 741 mph.The speed of sound in an ideal gas depends only on its temperature and composition. The speed has a weak dependence on frequency and pressure in ordinary air, deviating slightly from ideal behavior.
In colloquial speech, speed of sound refers to the speed of sound waves in air. However, the speed of sound varies from substance to substance: typically, sound travels most slowly in gases, faster in liquids, and fastest in solids. For example, while sound travels at 343 m/s in air, it travels at 1,481 m/s in water (almost 4.3 times faster) and at 5,120 m/s in iron (almost 15 times faster). In an exceptionally stiff material such as diamond, sound travels at 12,000 metres per second (39,000 ft/s),— about 35 times its speed in air and about the fastest it can travel under normal conditions.
Sound waves in solids are composed of compression waves (just as in gases and liquids), and a different type of sound wave called a shear wave, which occurs only in solids. Shear waves in solids usually travel at different speeds, as exhibited in seismology. The speed of compression waves in solids is determined by the medium's compressibility, shear modulus and density. The speed of shear waves is determined only by the solid material's shear modulus and density.
In fluid dynamics, the speed of sound in a fluid medium (gas or liquid) is used as a relative measure for the speed of an object moving through the medium. The ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of sound in the fluid is called the object's Mach number. Objects moving at speeds greater than Mach1 are said to be traveling at supersonic speeds.
Hello.
Homework Statement
A person holds a rifle horizontally and fires at a target. The bullet has a muzzle speed of 20 m/s and the person hears the bullet strike the target 1.00s after firing it. The air temperature is 72 degrees F. What is the distance to the target?
Homework...
I hope this is applicable to this section.
Basically I have two hydrophones immersed in a water bath, approximately 12cm apart. One is connected to a function generator, the other to an oscilloscope.
I'm comparing both the transmitted and received waveforms on the scope, but I'm finding it...
Homework Statement
In the practical for calculating speed of sound using the resonance tube why do we put wool to the bottom of the cylinder?
Homework Equations
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The Attempt at a Solution
To prevent the tube from hitting the bottom hard for it can be broken.
Why the speed of sound does not depend upon Pressure??
Homework Statement
Why the speed of sound doesn't depend upon Pressure When it does depend on Density?
Homework Equations
c =sqrt(gamma p/rho)
The Attempt at a Solution
I honestly would've thought that higher pressures mean that...
hi there
I am currently working with linear flows and using a ultrasonic setup to determine the speed of sound in a linear gaseous flow. But I would like to know more about the speed of sound in a vortical flow. Unfortunately I haven't been able to find any good book with regard to my topic...
I understand statistical mechanics. I understand that PV=nRT has no lower bound on density. Yet I'm bugged by the thought that the densities in interstellar (or even intergalactic) nebulas are so low that most particles will never experience any collisions at all, thus undermining the premise...
Homework Statement
Given the tension T and unit mass per length U of a string what is the speed of sound along the string
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I know how to find the propagation speed of a transverse wave on a string, is that the same as the speed of...
Problem:
In my physics class, we conducted an experiment involving a column of air set vibrating by a tuning fork of a known frequency f held at the upper end. The wave travels from the source to a fixed end (namely the water in the lower end of the tube) & reflected back to the source...
Homework Statement
David is swimming when he hears a beaver sap the water with its tail, first through the water (v= 1400 meters/second) and then 0.95 seconds later (after the sound reaches him through the water) through the air (v= 340 meters/second).
Homework Equations
Find the...
A swimmer sees a parachutist hit the water and hears the impact twice, once through the water and the second time through the air, 1.0 s later. How far from the swimmer did the impact occur?
Vs air = 340 m/s Vs water = 1400 m/s the answer is 450m
I don't understand what to do...
Homework Statement
An observer listens to a vibrating string using a cardboard tube of length 1.4m placed close to his ear (one end closed). The string is excited so as to vibrate at its fundamental frequency, and the tension is increased slowly. The intensity of the sound heard by the...
Homework Statement
You drop a stone down a well. You hear the 'splash' 1.63s later. How deep is the well? The speed of sound in air is 343m/s.
Homework Equations
Kinematic equation: Δh=V0t+1/2gt2
Also, I've narrowed the problem down to the total time of 1.63s is equal to...
1) the...
Doesn't Felix have an advantage when breaking the sound barrier since the air in which he is moving is less dense, therefore the speed of sound itself is considerably slower?
(Felix Baumgartner is the man who recently jumped from 128,000 feet in an attempt to become the first man to break the...
How fast is speed of signal between 2 atoms ?
Is it speed of light in electric field and then it slows down to speed of sound at more massive nucleus (p=mv) ?
If you have a tank of water then the speed of sound is 1482 m/s. If you add ethanol, the speed of sound increases. This seems to be pretty linear with the % concentration of ethanol. why does ethanol (or propanol) increase the speed of sound?
thanks
Hai,
I have a material related question. I am working with polymeric materials (Poly carbonate's and PMMA's respectively) which have to be tested for impact resistance (at high velocities). It came to my mind if the impact process could be correlated to a sound based measurement. Now i want...
Here's how I understand the situation: when an electrical current is running through a wire, the individual electrons are moving very slowly. The reason that a light bulb turns on so quickly after the switch is closed, then, is because as the electrons near the switch start moving, they push on...
Homework Statement
How do you calculate the speed of sound in water at 16 degrees celsius?
Homework Equations
Speed at 20 degrees is 1482m/s
The Attempt at a Solution
I need help getting started... I don't know how to go about trying to work this out (this isn't a homework...
When an object is thrown out from the front of a vehicle, its initial velocity relative to the ground is the velocity relative to the vehicle plus the velocity of the vehicle.
Why is this not the case with sound traveling out from the front of a jet for instance? Or do the velocities add...
Hi, I've been trying to look up the effects of density and humidity on the speed of sound, and I've been finding conflicting results. Some websites have stated that increased humidity will increase the speed of sound because of decreased density in the air, but wikipedia's speed of sound article...
Speed of sound at a specific temperature is independent of Pressure as Pressure varies directly with density.
So wouldn't any change in density vary the pressure such that it has no net effect on speed of sound? but my book says the speed increases with decrease in density...
i was wondering that can the speed of sound be lowered than the normal 335m/s in air without changing the air conditions? let's say u spoke in a low voice, will the sound still travel at 335m/s? will all air waves travel at that speed. no matter how weak or strong they are?
I've preformed an experiment about the speed of sound waves in water and I found that sound traveled faster in hot water than cold water (distilled water), but it traveled still faster in salt water. So, how can I explain why the speed of sound increases with salinity?
We have the equation:
c=...
The following is part of an experiment about the speed of sound in different depths of a liquid, I'm trying to solve it in Matlab.
http://img546.imageshack.us/img546/5952/20120408201206.jpg
Here is my attempt:
clc
clf
N=13;
d=1900:-100:700;
t=[2.62 2.37 2.35 2.25 2.09 1.86...
Homework Statement
A rhinoceros is calling to her mate using sound wave whose frequency is 5.0 Hz. Her mate is 480 m away. The air is 35°C. How many wavelengths of the sound are between the two animals?
Homework Equations
v = 331 + (.6)*T
v = wavelength*frequency
The Attempt at a...
Homework Statement
17.While cruising the North Atlantic in a fog, a ship blew its horn, and received an echo from an iceberg 4.0 s later. The temperature of the air was 5°C, the temperature of the iceberg was 0°C, and the temperature of the water was 2°C In order to calculate the distance...
Homework Statement
A student standing on top of a cliff drops a rock down below into the water and hears it splash 3 seconds later. The speed of sound is 330m/s, what is the height of the cliff
Homework Equations
v= d/t
v2 = v1 + at
d = v2-1/2 at2
d = (v1 + v2)t
v2 squared = v1...
Does anyone have an explanation for why kinetic energy carried by electromagnetic radiation travels at the speed of light?
My understanding of the speed of sound is that the denser the medium, the faster the wave velocity. Since this is just kinetic energy propagating through a medium, how is...
A pebble is dropped into a deep well, and 3.0s later the sound of a splash is heard as the pebble reaches the bottom of the well. The speed of sound in air is 340m/s.
(A) How long does it take for the pebble to hit the water?
(B) How long does it take for the sound to reach the observer?
(C)...
I've seen stated in many a physics book that the general case for the speed of sound (for general equations of state p(ρ) ) is given by
c^2 = \frac{\partial p}{\partial \rho}
where p is pressure and ρ is density.
but I can't for the life of me figure out how on Earth to derive that...
If amplitude is the measure of energy in a sound wave -
On increasing amplitude, the medium particles should hit each other in lesser time because they have more force(which increases their speed) and this cycle should repeat and repeat. Eventually, the speed of sound should increase. But...
Homework Statement
A jet is flying horizontally, as the drawing shows. When the plane is directly overhead at B, a person on the ground hears the sound coming from A in the drawing. The average temperature of the air is 20 oC. If the speed of the plane at A is 180 m/s, what is its speed at...
Speed of sound
The speed of sound c in a gas depends on among other things on the pressure on the gas, the density and probably, possibly on their viscosity. Determine c-
My Variable list:
Pressure p ML^-1T^-2
Density ρ ML^-3
Speed v LT^-1
My matrix:
| | M | L | T |
| p | 1 |...
wrt means with respect to
Homework Statement
see attachment that contains full question.
firstly read paragraph then see on question.
The Attempt at a Solution
velocity of sound will be 340ms-1 wrt air or ground(since air i snot blowng).
Now speed of soud wrt train A= speed of sound...
When I was younger I had a ball on a string. For what it's worth, the ball was quite a dense rubber, and about two inches in diameter and spherical, so I think it weighed about two-and-a-bit ounces, maybe two-and-a-half. The string was about a metre long, and it was very stretchy...
Once I...
Hello there, I'm making a presentation on the speed of sound in a few days and I was wondering if anyone knows where I can find a video that shows a (preferably huge) explosion from a distance with a timer on it.
What I wish to convey from this video is the fact that the light from the...
Homework Statement
Using the equation P=m/V show that the equation PV=nRT can become P/p=(R/MW)T
P=pressure
p=density of air
n=number of moles of gas
R=gas constant
T=temperature
m=mass
V=volume
MW=mass of one mole of air
Homework Equations
P=m/V
PV=nRT
P/p=(R/MW)T
The Attempt at a...
Hi
This is probably simple but i just can't seems to work it out:
assume no gravity or friction:
car 1 traveling at a constant speed of 50m.s in one direction
Car 2 traveling at a constant speed of 50m.s on top of car 1 in same direction
car 3 traveling at a constant speed of 50m.s on...
Hi friends,
I need the average speed of sound in some common solids, such as Si, Cu and Al, over temperature ranges from 100K to 500K.
After 5 hours of surveying acoustic and physical properties handbooks and googling the web, what I find is almost nothing.
Does anybody know a...
Why is it that materials with a higher bulk modulus value allow for sound waves to propagate through them faster? A material with a high bulk modulus requires a relative greater increase in pressure to contract by the same volume as a material with a lower bulk modulus, and as such sound waves...
Homework Statement
Determine the speed of sound in argon gas at 30 degrees celcius. Argon is a monoatomic gas with atomic mass 40. Assume adiabatic and ideal gas conditions. The mass of a nucleuon is 1.67*10-27 kg=mp.
Homework Equations
Adiabatic constraint: pVγ=constant.
Ideal gas...
Homework Statement
You see a neighbour in a cottage across the lake chopping wood. He is 2 km away and you see that it takes 2 s to hear each chop after you see it happen. Calculate the air temperature. (v= 332+ 0.6 T)
Homework Equations
v=d/t
The Attempt at a Solution
v= 1 km/s...
Homework Statement
A student holds a 325.6 Hz tuning fork near the end of a pipe that is closed at one end. He notices that resonances can be heard for several different lengths, one of which is 55.5 cm. He gradually lengthens the pipe to 92.5 cm where he detects the next resonance...
According to the equation c=√(C/ρ) where c is the speed of sound, C is the coefficient of stiffness and ρ is the density of the medium throughout which a sound is played the speed of sound should acctually decrease with an increase in density. Why is this so? I would've thought that increasing...
Hi.
I apologize if this thread is in the wrong location, as you see: My knowladge of Physics is (probably) at the level of a 10th grader... or maybe less... which is what I am.
I won't bore you with how I got into such a theory, but before I start I'd like to state that I start this topic for...
Homework Statement
[PLAIN]http://www.antonine-education.co.uk/Physics%20A%20level/Options/Module_8/Topic_6/cars_4.gif
What is the speed of sound, relative to:
A -
B -
C -
Homework Equations
None.
The Attempt at a Solution
For B, since B is a stationary reference point...
I know that temperature effects the speed of sound.
Can this also effect the speed of sound?
-Frequency : high or low?
-Gas type : if its traveling through oxygen or helium ? How would they compare? Does their mass play a part and heat capacity?
My attempt: I think the gas type will...
Operating on what I have been taught (that sound is the vibration of the air and that particles compress, then expand, then bump into others which compress, hence waves), I don't see why louder sound doesn't travel faster than slower sound?
Can anyone help me with this?
Hey,
I've built a Cold Gas Rocket using a Co2 tank that stores liquid C02 at room temperature around 850 psi. (A Cold Gas Rocket is a rocket that uses a pressurized tank to propel the reaction mass instead of combustion, essentially just open a scuba tank and that's a very dangerous (not the...