Fundamental frequency of a stretched string

AI Thread Summary
The fundamental frequency of a stretched string is initially 200 Hz. When the string's length is doubled and tension increased by 100 times, the new frequency is calculated to be 100 Hz. The formula used, F = 1/2L x sqrt(T/m), is confirmed to be dimensionally correct when considering linear density instead of mass. The participants discuss potential errors in the provided answers and agree that the question may be flawed. The conversation highlights the importance of verifying formulas and understanding the variables involved.
lykan_004
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Homework Statement



The fundamental frequency of a stretched string is 200Hz. when the length of the string is doubled and Tension of the string made 100times the initial Tension, what is the new fundamental frequency of the string.

(1) 50 Hz (2) 100 Hz (3) 200Hz (4) 400 Hz (5) 800 Hz

Homework Equations



F = 1/2L x sqrt(T/ m)

The Attempt at a Solution



The answer I get is 1000Hz.
 
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correct attempt
 
does that mean the question is wrong? coz there are similar questions, and i don't get the correct answer for any of them.
 
lykan_004 said:

Homework Equations



F = 1/2L x sqrt(T/ m)

I think you'll want to verify this formula. It seems to be missing a factor of L inside the square root. You can verify by checking that the units don't work out to Hz in its present form.
 
gneill said:
I think you'll want to verify this formula. It seems to be missing a factor of L inside the square root. You can verify by checking that the units don't work out to Hz in its present form.

m - linear density here not mass..that makes the equation dimensionally correct.
 
lykan_004 said:
m - linear density here not mass..that makes the equation dimensionally correct.

Ah. Perhaps then \rho would have been a better choice of variable name :smile:

So it would appear that your answer is correct; The frequency should change by a factor of \sqrt{100}/2 = 5. It sometimes happens that the provided answers are not correct.
 
u r rite .. i wonder the same thing... :) but i hav no idea why they use m.
 
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