Introduction to Wave Motion

Wave motion: propagation of disturbance through a medium without net transport of matter. Characterized by oscillatory movement, energy transfer, and periodicity. Ubiquitous in nature: sound, light, water waves, seismic waves. Essential for understanding physical phenomena and technological applications.

"Waves are the carriers of energy and information across space and time." -- Richard Feynman

Basic Concepts of Waves

Oscillation and Disturbance

Oscillation: repetitive variation around equilibrium. Disturbance: initial displacement that propagates. Medium: substance/waveguide transmitting wave.

Wavefront and Wave Path

Wavefront: locus of points in phase. Wave path: direction of propagation. Wavefronts perpendicular to propagation direction in homogeneous media.

Frequency and Period

Frequency (f): oscillations per second (Hz). Period (T): time per oscillation (s). Relation: f = 1/T.

Types of Waves

Mechanical Waves

Require medium. Subcategories: transverse (oscillation ⟂ propagation), longitudinal (oscillation ∥ propagation).

Electromagnetic Waves

Do not require medium. Transverse electric and magnetic fields oscillate perpendicular to propagation.

Matter Waves

Quantum mechanical probability waves. Describe particle wavefunctions. Non-classical nature.

Properties of Waves

Wavelength (λ)

Distance between two successive identical points (crests/troughs). Units: meters (m).

Amplitude (A)

Maximum displacement from equilibrium. Proportional to wave energy.

Speed (v)

Rate of wavefront propagation. Depends on medium and wave type.

Phase

Relative position in oscillation cycle. Defines interference behavior.

Intensity

Power per unit area transported by wave. Proportional to amplitude squared.

Mathematical Description and Wave Equations

Wave Function

Describes displacement: y(x,t) = A sin(kx - ωt + φ). Includes amplitude (A), wave number (k), angular frequency (ω), phase (φ).

Wave Number and Angular Frequency

k = 2π/λ (rad/m). ω = 2πf (rad/s).

General Wave Equation

Partial differential form: ∂²y/∂x² = (1/v²) ∂²y/∂t². Governs wave propagation in 1D.

y(x,t) = A sin(kx - ωt + φ)k = 2π / λω = 2π fWave Equation: ∂²y/∂x² = (1/v²) ∂²y/∂t²

Wave Speed and its Determinants

Speed Formula

Relation: v = f λ. Frequency determined by source, wavelength by medium.

Mechanical Wave Speed

Depends on medium properties: tension, density, elasticity. Example: v = √(T/μ) for string waves.

Electromagnetic Wave Speed

Constant in vacuum: c ≈ 3 x 10⁸ m/s. Reduced in media by refractive index n: v = c/n.

Effect of Medium Parameters

Density ↑ → speed ↓ (usually). Elastic modulus ↑ → speed ↑. Temperature affects speed (e.g., sound in air).

MediumTypical Speed (m/s)
Air (20°C)343
Water1482
Steel5960

Wave Behavior: Reflection, Refraction, Diffraction

Reflection

Wave bounces off boundary. Angle of incidence = angle of reflection. Phase may invert depending on boundary conditions.

Refraction

Change in wave direction/speed crossing media boundary. Governed by Snell's law: n₁ sinθ₁ = n₂ sinθ₂.

Diffraction

Wave bends around obstacles/openings. Pronounced when wavelength comparable to obstacle size.

PhenomenonDescriptionKey Law/Principle
ReflectionWave reverses direction at boundaryAngle of incidence = Angle of reflection
RefractionWave changes speed/direction crossing mediaSnell's Law
DiffractionWave bends around edges/aperturesHuygens-Fresnel Principle

Interference of Waves

Constructive and Destructive Interference

Superposition principle: resultant displacement is sum of individual waves. Constructive: in-phase, amplitude increases. Destructive: out-of-phase, amplitude decreases.

Conditions for Interference

Coherent sources (constant phase difference, same frequency). Path difference determines interference type.

Applications

Interferometry, noise cancellation, diffraction gratings, holography.

Resultant Amplitude, A_r = 2A cos(Δφ/2)Where Δφ = phase difference between wavesConstructive if Δφ = 2nπDestructive if Δφ = (2n+1)π

Standing Waves and Resonance

Formation of Standing Waves

Interference of two waves with equal frequency/amplitude traveling opposite directions. Nodes: zero displacement. Antinodes: maximum displacement.

Resonance

Amplification of standing waves at natural frequencies. Dependent on medium properties and boundary conditions.

Mathematical Description

Standing wave: y(x,t) = 2A sin(kx) cos(ωt). Node condition: sin(kx) = 0 → x = nλ/2.

Energy Transmission in Waves

Energy Transport Mechanism

Waves transfer energy without particle transport. Energy proportional to square of amplitude and frequency.

Power and Intensity

Power: energy transferred per unit time. Intensity: power per unit area perpendicular to propagation.

Energy in Mechanical Waves

Energy density u = ½ μ ω² A². Power P = u v. μ = mass per unit length.

Applications of Wave Motion

Communication Technologies

Radio, microwave, fiber optics: use electromagnetic waves for data transmission.

Medical Imaging

Ultrasound: mechanical waves for internal body imaging. MRI uses radio waves.

Seismology

Earthquake wave analysis for subsurface structure and hazard prediction.

Acoustics

Sound engineering, noise control, architectural design for wave behavior optimization.

Experimental Techniques in Wave Study

Ripple Tanks

Visualize water wave phenomena: reflection, refraction, diffraction, interference.

Oscilloscopes

Measure electrical waveforms, frequency, amplitude, phase relationships.

Interferometers

Precise measurement of wavelength, refractive index, small displacements.

Laser Doppler Anemometry

Velocity measurement using Doppler shift of scattered laser light.

References

  • Tipler, P. A., & Mosca, G. P. Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 6th ed., W. H. Freeman, 2007, pp. 610-670.
  • Halliday, D., Resnick, R., & Walker, J. Fundamentals of Physics, 10th ed., Wiley, 2013, pp. 462-520.
  • Born, M., & Wolf, E. Principles of Optics, 7th ed., Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 1-50.
  • Feynman, R. P., Leighton, R. B., & Sands, M. The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. 1, Addison-Wesley, 1964, pp. 33-70.
  • Serway, R. A., & Jewett, J. W. Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 9th ed., Brooks/Cole, 2014, pp. 700-740.