Interference of SoundTwo traveling waves which exist in the same medium will interfere with each other. If their amplitudes add, the interference is said to be constructive interference, and destructive interference if they are "out of phase" and subtract. Patterns of destructive and constructive interference may lead to "dead spots" and "live spots" in auditorium acoustics. Interference of incident and reflected waves is essential to the production of resonant standing waves. Interference has far reaching consequences in sound because of the production of "beats" between two frequencies which interfere with each other.
|
Index Traveling wave concepts Sound propagation concepts | |||
|
Go Back |
Interference with a Tuning ForkIf you strike a tuning fork and rotate it next to your ear, you will note that the sound alternates between loud and soft as you rotate through the angles where the interference is constructive and destructive. It is challenging to visualize this in a diagram because of the large difference in scale between the tuning fork and the wavelengths of the sound produced. A tuning fork to produce equal tempered middle-C (C4, 261.6Hz) would have a dimension of a few centimeters, but the sound wavelength at room temperature would be about 1.3 m or over four feet.
Each tine of the fork produces a pressure wave which travels outward at the speed of sound. One part of the wave has a pressure higher than atmospheric pressure, another lower. At some angles the high pressure areas of the two waves coincide and you hear a louder sound. At other angles, the high pressure part of one wave coincides with the low pressure part of the other. |
Index Traveling wave concepts Sound propagation concepts | ||||||
|
Go Back |
PhaseIf a mass on a rod is rotated at constant speed and the resulting circular path illuminated from the edge, its shadow will trace out simple harmonic motion. If the shadow vertical position is traced as a function of time, it will trace out a sine wave. A full period of the sine wave will correspond to a complete circle or 360 degrees. The idea of phase follows this parallel, with any fraction of a period related to the corresponding fraction of a circle in degrees. |
Index Traveling wave concepts Sound propagation concepts | ||
|
Go Back |
Interference and Phase
|
Index Traveling wave concepts Sound propagation concepts | ||
|
Go Back |