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Created by
Nadia Niedzwiecka
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Cards (39)
What are sound waves primarily composed of?
Vibrations passing through
molecules
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How do sound waves travel through materials?
By causing
particles
to vibrate
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What are compressions in sound waves?
Regions where
particles
are closest together
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What are rarefactions in sound waves?
Regions where
particles
are furthest apart
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How do sound waves behave in solids?
They cause
particles
to vibrate and collide
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Why does sound travel faster in solids than in gases?
Particles
are more
densely packed
in solids
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Why can't sound travel through a vacuum?
There are no
particles
to vibrate
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What happens to sound waves when they move between different mediums?
Their
speed
changes, but frequency remains constant
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What does the equation speed = frequency × wavelength imply when speed increases?
Wavelength must
increase
if frequency stays the
same
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How does wavelength change in higher density mediums?
Wavelength gets longer as
sound speeds
up
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What happens to wavelength in low density materials like air?
Wavelength gets shorter as
sound
slows down
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What is refraction in relation to sound?
Sound can change direction when moving between
mediums
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What surfaces reflect most sound waves?
Hard
flat
surfaces
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What is an echo?
A reflection of
sound waves
from surfaces
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What are the main parts of the human ear involved in hearing?
Ear canal
Eardrum
Ossicles (three small bones)
Semicircular canals
Cochlea
Auditory
nerve
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What happens when sound waves reach the ear?
They travel along the
ear canal
to the
eardrum
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What do vibrations of the eardrum cause?
They are transmitted through the
ossicles
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What does the cochlea do with vibrations?
It converts them into
electrical
signals
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How does the brain interpret electrical signals from the cochlea?
As
sounds
with varying
pitches
and
volumes
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What frequency range can humans generally hear?
20
hertz
to
20,000
hertz
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How does age affect human hearing?
Hearing range typically
decreases
with age
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What causes the decrease in hearing range as we age?
Wear and tear of the
cochlea
and
auditory nerve
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What is the frequency range of ultrasound?
Above
20,000 Hertz
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How do some animals like bats use ultrasound?
For communication or
echolocation
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How do humans produce ultrasound?
Using
electrical
devices
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What happens when ultrasound hits a boundary between two mediums?
Some waves are
reflected
, some transmitted
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What is partial reflection in ultrasound?
Only some
waves
are reflected at boundaries
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How can we determine the distance to a boundary using ultrasound?
By knowing
speed
and time of reflection
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Why is ultrasound considered safe?
It does not involve
radiation
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What is a common use of ultrasound in medicine?
Scanning
fetuses
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How does ultrasound imaging work for fetuses?
It processes
echoes
to create live images
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What indicates a fault in an industrial object using ultrasound?
Unexpected
reflected
waves at cracks
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What is sonar used for?
Sensing
submarines
and objects underwater
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If a submarine fires ultrasound at 1400 m/s and detects it 6 seconds later, how far is the seafloor?
4,200 meters
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What equation is used to calculate distance in sonar?
Distance =
speed
×
time
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Why do we divide the total distance by two in sonar calculations?
To account for the
return trip
of the waves
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What are the applications of ultrasound technology?
Prenatal scanning
Industrial imaging
Sonar
for underwater detection
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What are the key processes involved in ultrasound imaging?
Sound wave
generation
Wave
transmission
through mediums
Reflection at
boundaries
Echo processing
to create images
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how is the depth of the boundary calculated
0.5 x
speed
x
time taken