A uniform rope of mass m and length L hangs from a ceiling.(a)Show that the speed of a transverse wave on the rope is a function of y, the distance from the lower end, and is given byv=gy .(b)Show that the time a transverse wave takes to travel the length of the rope is given byt=2L/g.

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. The speed of a transverse wave on the rope is a function of y, the distance from the lower end is given by v=gy
  2. The time a transverse wave takes to travel the length of the rope is given byt=2Lg

Step by step solution

01

The given data

  • The mass of the rope is m.
  • Length of the rope is L.
02

Understanding the concept of the wave equation

The wave speed in a stretched string will be reciprocal of the square root of linear density of the string, provided tension in the string should be unity.

Formula:

Wave speed of a given string, V=Tμ (i)

The linear density of a string,μ=mL (ii)

03

a) Proving that the speed of the wave is a function of distance, y

Using equation (ii), the mass of the string is given as:

m=μL

Therefore, the mass of the string below point y with length y can be given as,

my=μy

Tension in the string below point y is

localid="1660980314188" T=μygGravitationalforcebalancesthetensionforceinthestring

Using value of we get

T=μyg.............................................1

Using equation (1) in equation (i), we get the speed of the wave as:

v=μygμT=μyg.............................................2

Hence, it is proved that the wave speed is a function of distance, y.

04

b) Proving that the time taken to travel the length of the rope is t=2L/g

Integrating equation 2, we get

v=gydydt=g12×y121g12×y-12dy=dt1gy-12dy=dt

Integrating the left hand side from role="math" localid="1660979848533" y=0toyand the right hand side fromt=0toT

1g0Ly-12dy=0Tdt2gy-120L=t0T2gL=TT=2Lg

Hence, it is proved that the value of time taken is T=2Lg.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Energy is transmitted at rateP1by a wave of frequency f1 on a string under tension τ1. What is the new energy transmission rate P2 in terms ofP1(a) if the tension is increased toτ2=4τ1 and (b) if, instead, the frequency is decreased tof2=f1/2?

For a particular transverse standing wave on a long string, one of an antinodes is at x = 0and an adjacent node is at x = 0.10 m. The displacement y(t)of the string particle at x = 0is shown in Fig.16-40, where the scale of y theaxis is set by ys=4.0cm. When t = 0.50 s, What is the displacement of the string particle at (a) x = 0.20 mand x = 0.30 m (b) x = 0.30 m? What is the transverse velocity of the string particle at x = 0.20 mat (c) t = 0.50 sand (d) t = 0.1 s ? (e) Sketch the standing wave atfor the range x = 0to x = 0.40 m.

The equation of a transverse wave traveling along a very long string is y=6.0sin(0.020πx+4.0πt), where x andy are expressed in centimeters and is in seconds. (a) Determine the amplitude,(b) Determine the wavelength, (c)Determine the frequency, (d) Determine the speed, (e) Determine the direction of propagation of the wave, and (f) Determine the maximum transverse speed of a particle in the string. (g)What is the transverse displacement atx = 3.5 cmwhen t = 0.26 s?

In Fig.16-42, a string, tied to a sinusoidal oscillator at Pand running over a support at Q, is stretched by a block of mass m. Separation L = 1.20 m, linear density, μ=1.6g/mand the oscillator frequency,. The amplitude of the motion at Pis small enough for that point to be considered a node. A node also exists atQ. (a) What mass mallows the oscillator to set up the fourth harmonicon the string? (b) What standing wave mode, if any, can be set up if m = 1.00 kg?

In Fig. 16-42, a string, tied to a sinusoidal oscillator at Pand running over a support at Q, is stretched by a block of mass m.The separation between Pand Qis 1.20 m, and the frequency fof the oscillator is fixed at 120 Hz. The amplitude of the motion atPis small enough for that point to be considered a node. A node also exists at Q. A standing wave appears when the mass of the hanging block is 286.1 gor 447.0 g, but not for any intermediate mass. What is the linear density of the string?

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Physics Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free