Woopydalan said:
Ok so first you said to think of the physics and forget the math, then when I try to understand the physics you use the math as your safety net of explanation :P
I probably also said to use the math as a
language ;)
I suspected that you may have been taking the use if y to literally mean a transverse displacement and I wanted to show you that it can mean anything I want.
[edit]It seems what I actually said was:
me said:
you have been used to a problem-solving method that requires that you "find the right equation" and then plug numbers into it.
You have to move away from that - let the physics dictate the form of the equation, then the math becomes a language.
Keep the physics in mind and these confusions go away...
... moving away from a "find the right equation" approach to problem solving is not the same as "forget the math".
For sound waves
##S(x,t) = S_{max} \cos(kx - \omega t)## (Why is the phase angle omitted??)
It isn't - the
relative phase angle is 0 for this particular example if the general equation is y(x,t)=Acos(kx-ωt+δ) and π/2 if the general equation is y(x,t)=Asin(kx-ωt+δ).
The
phase angle, or just "phase" for short, is θ=kx-ωt+δ ... the δ is the
relative phase for the situation that S(0,0)≠S
max.
Imagining a piston oscillating back and forth, it pushes air molecules toward the end of the tube, when it pushes the batch of air, there is less air density at that area when the piston returns back to its initial position, so the air molecules return back to fill that void, hence oscillations of the batches of air. The original air pushes another batch of air, then the air ensity in that spot is less so the 2nd batch returns, and that behavior continues.
This situation is what s is referring to, yes?
There are lots of ways to make an oscillating pressure wave and that would be one of them, yes.
Such that the S_max is the amplitude of the oscillations of the individual batches of air. The x is referring to where along the line in space that batch of air molecules is present?
For a particular molecule, x is it's equilibrium position
And S(x,t) is referring to where in that individual range that the air molecule batch can oscillate?
It tells you how far from it's equilibrium position a molecule normally at position x has been shifted.
Easier to understand if S is pressure ... a pressure gauge at position x will show a reading of S(x,t).