Nature of Waves: Why Do They Form?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the formation of waves, specifically addressing sound waves and electromagnetic radiation. Participants clarify that sound waves in air are compression waves, where air particles move closer together and then spread apart, rather than moving in a sine wave pattern. The conversation highlights the role of restoring forces in wave motion, with the equation for wave speed being derived from tension and inertia. Additionally, the properties of electromagnetic radiation are discussed, emphasizing the absence of a medium and the relationship between electric tension and magnetic inductance.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of wave mechanics and wave motion
  • Familiarity with sound wave properties and behavior
  • Basic knowledge of electromagnetic theory
  • Mathematical concepts related to tension and inertia in wave propagation
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the principles of wave mechanics in detail
  • Explore the differences between compression waves and transverse waves
  • Learn about Maxwell's equations and their implications for electromagnetic waves
  • Investigate the relationship between wave speed, tension, and inertia in various mediums
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Students of physics, educators in wave mechanics, and professionals in acoustics and electromagnetic theory will benefit from this discussion.

LightRocks
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My question is regarding the nature of waves, and may be a very elementary question. Please bear with me.

I am curious as to why waves form the way that they do. If for example i were to turn on the speaker in my car, then the resulting wave that is produced is simply energy transfer through air particles. Why does the energy transfer in a wave pattern? Are the air particles actually bouncing off each other in a pattern that resembles a wave, constantly turning up and down through the medium in which they are traveling? Is there some nature of matter that causes travel through it to propagate in a wave formation? Or does the energy transfer travel in a straight line and the wave is a way of measuring its intensity at anyone point?

Thanks for any help :)


EDIT: Now that i think about it sound, light, water etc must travel through their mediums in actual wave patterns, otherwise cancellation(like in the 2 slit light experiment) wouldn't happen. Still I'm wondering why waves form the way that they do. Is a wave pattern the path of least resistance for the energy that is being transferred?
 
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LightRocks said:
I am curious as to why waves form the way that they do. If for example i were to turn on the speaker in my car, then the resulting wave that is produced is simply energy transfer through air particles. Why does the energy transfer in a wave pattern? Are the air particles actually bouncing off each other in a pattern that resembles a wave, constantly turning up and down through the medium in which they are traveling? Is there some nature of matter that causes travel through it to propagate in a wave formation? Or does the energy transfer travel in a straight line and the wave is a way of measuring its intensity at anyone point?
To answer this question you have to look at the forces that cause motion to occur, and how those forces vary in time and over space.

Energy moves in waves where there are restoring forces. If a displacement of matter gives rise to a restoring force, the matter will undergo some form of wave motion.

AM
 
I'm not entirely sure, but your post seems to imply that you believe that the particles are moving up and down to make a sine wave, like a wave on a rope. This is not how a sound wave is transmitted in air. A sound wave is a compression wave where the air particles transmit the wave by squishing together and spreading apart.
 
moose352

"spherical" would be the proper form of a sound wave, not sine. AM is saying that the "duality" of compression/expansion each acts as a restorative or causal force to create the next, larger, wave front.

TRoc
 
T. Roc,

I am aware of that the sound wave is not a sine wave. That is what I was clarifying my post, as the OP seemed as though he believe that a sound wave is like a sine wave.

Moose
 
hmm

thanks everyone, this helps to clarify it for me :)

As for electromagnetic radiation, is that different? It seems like there could be no restoring force for that, since its not just a rippling of the medium ...
 
In all waves, the speed goes up with "tension" (think of a stretched string), and goes down with "inertia" (thicker strings = slower speed). The equation is like this:

speed = (\frac{tension}{inertia})^1/2

To paraphrase the achievements of J.C. Maxwell in modern notation:

The restoring force is the electric tension:

\frac{1}{\epsilon_0} "The permitivity of free space." = 8.85*10^12

And the inertial element is the magnetic inductance:

\mu_0 "The permeability of free space". = 4*pi*10^-7

If you relate these in the way common to all waves:

speed = (\frac{tension}{inertia})^1/2

Then you calculate a speed of 300,000,000 m/s i.e. the speed of light.

 

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