How Does an Obstacle Affect Wave Parameters?

AI Thread Summary
Maziar Bahiraee, a chemical engineering graduate, inquired about how wave parameters change when encountering an obstacle, specifically a metallic lump with free electrons. The discussion clarified that electromagnetic waves interact with conductors, leading to changes in parameters like wavelength or frequency. It was noted that when a wave hits a slower medium, its wavelength shortens, but returns to normal upon exiting. The method for measuring these changes and calculating distance involves interferometry, using an interferometer. The conversation emphasized the need for more specific details to provide a comprehensive answer.
MahIzadYar
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hi dear friends,
I am Maziar Bahiraee a chemical engineering graduate. I had a question about one of my last inventions and I found that friends this group are specialized in this field.
Q: After a wave with specific parameters encounters an obstacle, which of the parameter(s) is changed and how this change parameter(s) can be measured and what device can calculate the destination between the obstacle and the device. By the wave this obstacle is not a barrier kind. For example, assume this wave is moving on a paved road and hits a speed reducer (as an obstacle) which of the wave parameters will change after the hit?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Welcome to PF.

What kind of wave are we talking about?

In general a traveling sine wave has form y(x)=A\sin[k(x-vt)] ... so it's parameters would be k, v, and A. If it hits a barrier, what happens depends on the nature of the barrier. Some of the wave is inverted and reflected so it's speed is reversed. Some is absorbed in the barrier, and some transmitted into the medium of the barrier. Not sure how to relate this to a paved road... but the distance between an object reflecting a radio wave and the device emmitting the waves can be found by a process called interferometry.

But you are a chemical engineering graduate - you should know all this. You know how waves get measured and so forth.
Perhaps if you can be more specific?
 
Dear Simon,
Thanks for your kindly quick reply.
Let me explain it in another way. when a wave hits a Lump (lump: Metallic nature with free electrons) one of its parameters(λ or frequency or... I don't exactly which) would change, I would set another device at the other side to receive this changed wave. I want this device to diagnosis this changed wave parameter and calculate the distance between the lump and the device.
I want to the name of this device or the process the lead to calculate the distance, the kind of wave and the parameter(s) that would change.
thanks in advance.
 
MahIzadYar said:
Dear Simon,
Thanks for your kindly quick reply.
Let me explain it in another way. when a wave hits a Lump (lump: Metallic nature with free electrons) one of its parameters(λ or frequency or... I don't exactly which) would change, I would set another device at the other side to receive this changed wave. I want this device to diagnosis this changed wave parameter and calculate the distance between the lump and the device.

For the wave to be influenced by something with free electrons, it must be an electromagnetic wave? Is this correct? The interaction between an EM wave and a conductor can be quite complicated.

I want to the name of this device or the process the lead to calculate the distance, the kind of wave and the parameter(s) that would change.
thanks in advance.

In general, if a traveling wave encounters a region where the wave speed is slower, then the wavelength gets shorter, inside that region. When it emerges from the other side, then the wavelength returns to it's original value.

There is no standard wavelength-meter ... but the most common technique to compare wavelengths is interferometry and the associated device is called an interferometer. I'm afraid your question is still far too general for a useful answer.
 
Thread 'Gauss' law seems to imply instantaneous electric field propagation'
Imagine a charged sphere at the origin connected through an open switch to a vertical grounded wire. We wish to find an expression for the horizontal component of the electric field at a distance ##\mathbf{r}## from the sphere as it discharges. By using the Lorenz gauge condition: $$\nabla \cdot \mathbf{A} + \frac{1}{c^2}\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t}=0\tag{1}$$ we find the following retarded solutions to the Maxwell equations If we assume that...
Dear all, in an encounter of an infamous claim by Gerlich and Tscheuschner that the Greenhouse effect is inconsistent with the 2nd law of thermodynamics I came to a simple thought experiment which I wanted to share with you to check my understanding and brush up my knowledge. The thought experiment I tried to calculate through is as follows. I have a sphere (1) with radius ##r##, acting like a black body at a temperature of exactly ##T_1 = 500 K##. With Stefan-Boltzmann you can calculate...
Thread 'A scenario of non-uniform circular motion'
(All the needed diagrams are posted below) My friend came up with the following scenario. Imagine a fixed point and a perfectly rigid rod of a certain length extending radially outwards from this fixed point(it is attached to the fixed point). To the free end of the fixed rod, an object is present and it is capable of changing it's speed(by thruster say or any convenient method. And ignore any resistance). It starts with a certain speed but say it's speed continuously increases as it goes...
Back
Top