Calculating Bat Flight Speed Using the Doppler Effect

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the flight speed of a bat using the Doppler effect, specifically focusing on the frequency of sound emitted by the bat and the beat frequency it hears when the sound reflects off a wall. The bat emits a sound at a frequency of 25.0 kHz and aims to hear a beat frequency of 220 Hz, with the speed of sound given as 344 m/s.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between emitted and received frequencies, with attempts to derive expressions for beat frequency based on the Doppler effect. There are questions about the algebraic manipulation of these expressions and the implications of Doppler shifts on both emission and reception.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants sharing their attempts and results. Some have provided algebraic expressions and numerical results, while others express confusion about the calculations and seek clarification on substitution steps. There is no explicit consensus on the correct approach or final answer yet.

Contextual Notes

Participants note potential pitfalls in the analysis related to Doppler shifts and the importance of correctly accounting for these effects in their calculations. There is mention of discrepancies in numerical answers and the need for careful consideration of the problem setup.

wimma
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Homework Statement



A bat flies toward a wall, emitting a steady sound with a frequency of 25.0 kHz. This bat hears its own sound plus the sound reflected by the wall.


How fast should the bat fly, v_b, to hear a beat frequency of 220 Hz?

Take the speed of sound to be 344 m/s.


Homework Equations



f_beat = f_a - f_b


The Attempt at a Solution



I let the speed of sound be v and let the emitted frequency be f_e and got an expression for the beat frequency:
f_beat = ((v+v_b)/(v-v_b)-1)f_e
Didn't get the right answer... Doing it another way I got
f_beat = (v^2/(v-v_b)^2 - 1)f_e
 
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Your answer for

f_{received by bat} = \frac{v_{sound} + v_{bat}}{v_{sound} - v_{bat}} f_{emitted}

seems to be right.

So your f_{beat} is alright too.

Getting v_{bat} is just a matter of algebra and substituting the right values.

The answer should have order of magnitude a * 10^0.
 
Last edited:
MasteringPhysics still fails me on that answer
Note: I compute 280.296 m/s

Why would it be that order of magnitude? (Other than common sense to do with a bat)
 
What is the numerical answer they quote (if they provide one)?

There are several ways this analysis can go wrong.

1) If you do not account for the fact that the frequency is doppler shifted on reception, the numerator goes from c+v to just c.

2) If you do not account for the fact that the frequency is doppler shifted on emission, the denominator goes from c-v to just c.

I compute 1.507 m/s
 
Thanks for your help, though I don't understand how you got that answer...

We go f_beat = f_receive - f_transmit

and when I substitute in I get the wrong answer... your answer was correct by the way.

Could you please put in your substitution steps? Thanks
 
Could you show yours?
 

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