Calculating Linear Density of a Standing Wave: Solving for Lambda

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The discussion focuses on calculating the linear density of a string in a standing wave setup with a length of 1.20m and a frequency of 120Hz. The presence of standing waves is confirmed at specific masses (286.1g and 447.0g), but the number of nodes and whether the waves are at fundamental or overtone frequencies remains unclear. Participants suggest using the relationship between string length, wavelength, and the number of nodes to derive the wavelength (λ) as λ = 2L/n. By substituting this expression for λ into the linear density equation, users can solve for the number of nodes corresponding to each mass. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the harmonic relationships to determine the linear density accurately.
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Standing waves are set up on the apparatus. Here the distance from P to Q is L=1.20m
and the oscillator is set to a frequency 120Hz. A standing wave appears when the mass of the hanging block is 286.1g or 447.0 grams, but not for any intermediate mass. What is the linear density of the string?

I know

μ = tension/v^2 = tension/(λ^2 f^2)

I need to get lambda but I don't know how to.

help is greatly appreciated!
 
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I'm not quite sure of the experimental set-up you have, but think about the number of nodes of the standing wave. It can be linked to the wavelength.
 
The thing is I don't know the # of nodes.
 
Just making sure, but does that also mean you don't know whether the standing wave is occurring at the fundamental frequency or at one of the overtones?
 
Yeah.
 
If L is the length of the string, what is the wavelength of the nth harmonic?
 
You know that nodes are separated by a distance which is half the wavelength therefore L=n*lambda/2
 
Do you agree that \lambda = \frac{2L}{n} in which L is the string length and n is the number of antinodes? Substitute for \lambda into the equation you already have, and make n the subject. You can then write the equation for n = n1 (say) for the tension corresponding to 447.0 gram, and another for n = n1 +1, for the tension corresponding to 286.1 gram. Take it from there...
 
Duplicate threads have been merged.
 
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