How Does Wire Diameter Affect Wave Speed?

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In summary, the two wires have the same tension and the speed of waves traveling along one wire is the same as the speed of waves traveling along the other wire.
  • #1
freeofwork
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Homework Statement



Two steel wires are stretched with the same tension. The first wire has a diameter of .00059 meters and the second wire has a diameter of .00089m. If the speed of waves traveling along the first wire is 54.0 m/s, what is the speed of the waves along the second wire?

Homework Equations



v=√Ft/μ
μ=m/L


The Attempt at a Solution



I have no idea how to get the mass or length of the string...
 
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  • #2
Hint: You know the diameters so you know the mass per unit length of each.
 
  • #3
LawrenceC said:
Hint: You know the diameters so you know the mass per unit length of each.

what would be the equation for that... i only know μ=m/L...
 
  • #4
You know the formula for velocity. The tension is the same for both wires. Mu is mass per unit length which you can determine by realizing that a wire is a cylinder. You know the velocity of the wave on one of the wires. Therefore, you can solve this without knowing the respective wire lengths.
 
  • #5
LawrenceC said:
You know the formula for velocity. The tension is the same for both wires. Mu is mass per unit length which you can determine by realizing that a wire is a cylinder. You know the velocity of the wave on one of the wires. Therefore, you can solve this without knowing the respective wire lengths.

imdont have e height though... how can you convert the diameter into something usable...
 
  • #6
m/l is mass per unit length.
 
  • #7
What's the formula for the volume of a cylinder?
 
  • #8
LawrenceC said:
What's the formula for the volume of a cylinder?

pi r^2h
 
  • #9
That's correct or you could also say (pi d^2/4)h. So what would be the mass per unit length?
 
  • #10
radical x over 54^2?
x being the tension?..
 
  • #11
Do you know what mass per unit length means?
 
  • #12
linear density
 
  • #13
In the case of a wire which is a cylinder the mass per unit length is:

m/L = rho * Volume/L = rho * pi * d^2/4 * L/L = rho * pi * d^2/4

where rho is the density in kg/meter^3.

You have the formula for the velocity of one wave at a specific m/L. You want the velocity of the wave in the other wire. The tensions are the same.

V1^2 = F/mu1 and V2^2 = F/mu2. Think about (V1/V2)^2.
 
  • #14
Got to hurry here. Giants-Falcons game starts in 11 minutes!
 
  • #15
how do you find the density or linear density? this is crazy
 
  • #16
You do not the actual number; you only need the ratio of the two.

V1^2 = F/mu1 and V2^2 = F/mu2. Think about (V1/V2)^2.
 
  • #17
idk...
 
  • #18
freeofwork said:
idk...

D
What is idk?
 
  • #19
i don't know.
 
  • #20
Ok, I shall provide more help. I cannot do it for you -forum rules.

Form a ratio for v1/v2. You know one of the v's. This ratio equals square root of mass per unit length ratios. You can compute this ratio. This leaves one unknown.
 
  • #21
what do u mean by mass per unit ratios?
 
  • #22
(M1/Ll)/(M2/L)

M's are dependent on diameters. L's drop out.
 
  • #23
o how would u get e mass?
so the equation who look something like this?
v1/v2=√m1m2
 
  • #24
You almost have it. Check your algebra. The radical should be m2/m1. Relate the m's to their respective diameters...
 
  • #25
i don't know how the mass are related to the diameters...
 
  • #26
Volume of a cylinder...
 
  • #27
i don't really get what to plug in there sir.
 
  • #28
Mass = rho * volume /g

rho is density and g is acceleration of gravity. If you are forming a ratio of mass per unit length of the same materials, everything cancels except the volumes.

The volume per unit length is simply (pi * d^2)/4 which is the cross sectional area of a cylinder. So the ratios of masses per unit length is the ratio of diameters squared.
 
  • #29
what is volume per unit length?
 
  • #30
I do not think you are serious about this problem.
 
  • #31
I do not think you are a good teacher. I got the answer with the formula of v1/v2=d2/d1
 
  • #32
I attempted to get you to figure the formula out because we are not permitted to merely hand out formulas and solutions. Anyone can plug into a formula and get the answer. Figuring out how to derive the formula separates the better students from the pack.
 

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