Waves & Elastic Medium: Homework Problem

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the behavior of waves in an elastic medium, specifically addressing how two vibrating sources interact within that medium. It is established that waves in an elastic medium can be treated independently, meaning they do not interact but rather pass through each other, with the total deformation being the sum of individual deformations. This principle holds true under the assumption that the deformations are small, allowing for linear approximation. Nonlinear optics presents a more complex scenario where this assumption may not apply.

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Homework Statement



Two vibrating sources emit waves in the same elastic medium.

2. Problem

This is just the beginning part of a question that goes into detail about speed, reflection, refraction, and angles of incidence. All of which I understand, but as usual, the easiest part of the problem is creating a huge mind block for me. I do not understand the exact definition of an elastic medium or medium, and if two sources are in it, how do they affect each other?

3. Attempt at solution

I think a 'medium' refers to the general area that the waves travel through, but then if there are two different waves in the area are they overlapping or acting independently?
My assumption is that the two waves act independently, but would be traveling at the same speed until they interact with another barrier.

Thank you in advance to anyone whom can help.
 
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A wave is a traveling deformation of the elastic medium. You generally assume the deformations are small enough the waves can be treated independently. So they don't interact. If two waves meet they will just pass through each other and the total deformation is the sum of the two deformations (I.e. it's linear). In some systems this isn't a valid approximation, like nonlinear optics. Much harder subject.
 

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