Solving a Doppler + Beat Frequency Problem for Bat Speed

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To determine the speed at which a bat must fly to hear a beat frequency of 10.0 Hz while emitting a sound of 2.00 kHz, the Doppler effect equations are applied. The frequency of the sound reflected from the wall is calculated using the Doppler shift formula for a moving source and stationary observer. The resulting frequency is then used in the beat frequency formula to find the difference between the bat's emitted sound and the reflected sound. After solving the equations, it is determined that the bat should fly at a speed of 0.029 m/s towards the wall. This calculation is precise to two significant figures, aligning with the provided data.
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A bat flies toward a wall, emitting a steady sound of frequency 2.00 kHz. This bat hears its own sound plus the sound reflected by the wall. How fast should the bat fly in order to hear a beat frequency of 10.0 Hz?
Give your answer to two significant figures. Take the speed of sound to be 344 m/s.

i know it's like a doppler + beat frequency problem and the equation to use is basically v=freq*wavelength and substitude lots of stuff in. but i get confused... someone help please. thanks. :cool:
 
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kv2 said:
A bat flies toward a wall, emitting a steady sound of frequency 2.00 kHz. This bat hears its own sound plus the sound reflected by the wall. How fast should the bat fly in order to hear a beat frequency of 10.0 Hz?
Give your answer to two significant figures. Take the speed of sound to be 344 m/s.
Use the doppler shift formula for moving source and stationary observer to find the frequency at the wall. The wall then reflects that sound back to the moving bat, so it acts like a stationary source for the reflected sound. Use a second doppler shift this time for stationary source and moving observer using the first doppler shifted frequency. This will give you the final reflected frequency heard by the bat in terms of the speed and the original frequency. Set v so that the result is a difference of 10 hz

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To solve this problem, we can use the formula for calculating the beat frequency: fbeat = |f1 - f2|, where f1 and f2 are the frequencies of the two sound sources (in this case, the bat's own sound and the reflected sound from the wall).

First, we need to find the frequency of the reflected sound. Since the bat is flying towards the wall, the reflected sound will have a higher frequency due to the Doppler effect. Using the Doppler equation, we can calculate the frequency of the reflected sound:

f2 = f0 * (v + vbat) / (v + vwall)

Where f0 is the original frequency (2.00 kHz), v is the speed of sound (344 m/s), vbat is the speed of the bat, and vwall is the speed of the wall (which we can assume to be 0).

Substituting in the values, we get:

f2 = 2.00 kHz * (344 m/s + vbat) / (344 m/s + 0)

Simplifying, we get:

f2 = 2.00 kHz * (344 m/s + vbat) / 344 m/s

Now, we can plug this value into the beat frequency formula:

fbeat = |2.00 kHz - (2.00 kHz * (344 m/s + vbat) / 344 m/s)|

We want the beat frequency to be 10.0 Hz, so we can set this equation equal to 10.0 Hz and solve for vbat:

10.0 Hz = |2.00 kHz - (2.00 kHz * (344 m/s + vbat) / 344 m/s)|

Simplifying and solving for vbat, we get:

vbat = 0.029 m/s

Therefore, the bat needs to fly at a speed of 0.029 m/s towards the wall in order to hear a beat frequency of 10.0 Hz. This answer is to two significant figures, as the given values (frequency and speed of sound) are also given to two significant figures.
 
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