How Do You Calculate the Propagation Speed of a Transverse Wave on a String?

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SUMMARY

The propagation speed of a transverse wave on a string with an amplitude of 16 cm, a wavenumber of 5.7 m-1, and a frequency of 39 Hz is calculated to be 43 m/s. The relevant equation for wave speed is v = ω/k, where ω is the angular frequency and k is the wavenumber. The angular frequency is derived from the frequency using ω = 2π/T, with T being the period (1/frequency). The discussion clarifies the definition of wavenumber as the number of waves per unit length, expressed as k = 2π/λ.

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RavenBlackwolf
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< Mentor Note -- thread moved to HH from the technical physics forums, so no HH Template is shown >

A transverse wave on a string has an amplitude of 16cm, a wavenumber of 5.7m-1, and a frequency of 39Hz. What is the propagation speed of that wave?
(a) 6.84 m/s
(b) 39.2 m/s
(c) 43 m/s
(d) 6.24 m/s
(e) 6.88 m/s
This is a question on my physics study guide packet and while we have done wave problems in the past it was never anything like this. First: can someone explain what a wavenumber is. Second: what is propagation speed. Third: which equation should I be using. I thought maybe xmcos(ωt+Φ) but I don't know what the phase angle would be. I'm very confused, I would just like to have a basic understanding of what this is asking.
 
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Hi there
welcome to PF :smile:

I have asked for this to be moved to homework section

RavenBlackwolf said:
A transverse wave on a string has an amplitude of 16cm, a wavenumber of 5.7m-1, and a frequency of 39Hz. What is the propagation speed of that wave?

from what you have studied so far, show us some of your thoughtsDave
 
Oh I didn't know there was one, sorry.
 
In particular: do you have an expression for the speed of a wave on a string ?
 
BvU said:
In particular: do you have an expression for the speed of a wave on a string ?
wave speed? I have v=ω/k=λ/T=λf I believe but what I don't know is whether or not that's what propagation speed is.
 
It is the good one in your case :smile:
 
BvU said:
It is the good one in your case :smile:
What do you mean by "the good one." I don't understand.
 
Oh I got it. The variable k is wavenumber, my professor never made that clear. So using:
ω=2π/T, T being the inverse of 39Hz or T=.0256
ω=245.04
v=ω/k=43m/s
so the answer is c.
This would've been a whole lot easier if that had been clear in my notes. Oops.
 
Regarding your question about wavenumber, wavenumber is the number of waves that fit in a unit space. In other words it is 1/wavelength. Usually for convenience instead of how many waves per unit length it is defined as how many radians per unit length, that is

k = 2 π/λ

This is a convenience in that it simplifies a lot of equations and it is also proportional to energy.
 
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