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inner08
Sep23-07, 05:37 PM
Question:
Two waves have the same amplitude, speed, frequency moving in the same region of space. The resultant wave can be expressed like the sum of two waves: psy(y,t) = Asin(ky+wt) + Asin(ky-wt+pi).

Express each wave individually using the complex representation. Demonstrate, using this representation, that the resultant wave can be expressed such as: psy(y,t)=2Acos(ky)sin(wt).

What is the amplitude at y=0, y=pi/k?


Attempt to answer:

I've tried breaking this problem into pieces. I'm having quite a bit of difficulty converting the wave equations into complex form.

I started by splitting the equation in two.

psi1(y,t) = (ky + wt)
psi2(y,t) = (ky - wt + pi)

From there, I'm not sure what to do. I know that I have to convert it into a form of Ae^i(wt-kx+epsilon).

Would simply be: psy1(y,t) = Ae^i(wt+ky) and psy2(y,t) = Ae^i(-wt+ky) ?

I'm pretty confused about this. I don't know where to go from here or even if what I did has sense to it. Hopefully someone can help me out!

inner08
Sep24-07, 07:51 AM
Anyone?

robphy
Sep24-07, 09:33 AM
Can you write \sin(\theta) in terms of the exponential function?

inner08
Sep24-07, 01:17 PM
I think (not sure) that its: 1/2i(e^i (\theta) - e^(-i (\theta) ))

inner08
Sep25-07, 06:05 AM
Would anyone know any websites that could explain the idea behind this because my book is limited when describing this concept?