
Two identical loudspeakers are placed on a wall 3.00 m apart. A listener stands 5.00 m...
Two identical loudspeakers 2.10 m apart are emitting sound waves into a room where the speed of sound is 340 m/s. Abby is standing 5.00 m in front of one of the speakers, perpendicular to the line joining the speakers, and hears a maximum in the intensity of the sound. What is the lowest possible frequency of sound for which this is possible?
question 1)
Two identical loudspeakers, A and B, are 3.00-m apart. The
loudspeakers are driven by the same amplifier and emit 900-Hz sound
waves in all directions. Take the speed of sound in air to be 344
m/s. A small microphone is moved out from point B along a line
perpendicular to the line connecting A and B.
a) At what distances from B will there be destructive
interference?
b) At what non-infinite distances from B will there be
constructive...
The figure shows two loudspeakers (A) and (B), and a point (C)
where a listener is positioned. The speakers vibrate in phase and
are playing a 67.0 Hz tone. The speed of sound is 343 m/s. The
listener at point (C) hears the nearest no sound at a distance 6.50
m as measured from speaker (A). What is the separation (d) between
the two speakers?
general physics.rutgers.edu General Physics 203 Online Assignments Hz 10. The figure shows two loudspeakers (A)...
The figure shows two loudspeakers (A) and (B), and a point (C) where a listener is positioned. The speakers vibrate out of phase and are playing a 77.0 Hz tone. The speed of sound is 342 m/s. The listener at point (C) hears the first constructive interference at a distance 5.00 m as measured from speaker (A). What is the separation (d) between the two speakers?m
Paisley stands in front of two speakers as shown which emit the same tone, in phase. She is 7.00 m from speaker A and 5.00 m fromB speaker B. a. What are the two lowest frequencies for which she hears: i. a loud sound? [171.5 Hz, 343 Hz] ii. a quiet sound [85.8 Hz, 257 Hz] d-5.00m A-7.00m b. The frequency of the speakers is then changed to 686 Hz Does Paisley hear a loud sound or a quiet sound?...
Two in-phase loudspeakers are placed along a wall and are
separated by a distance of 6.00 m. They emit sound (take vs = 343
m/s) with a frequency of 137.2 Hz. A person is standing away from
the wall, in front of one of the loudspeakers. What is the closest
distance x from the speaker the person can stand and hear a sound
intensity maximum?
4. [5] Two in-phase loudspeakers are placed along a wall and are separated by a...
Two loudspeakers placed 6.0 m apart are driven in phase by an audio oscillator, whose frequency range is 711 Hz to 1124 Hz. A point P is located 5.1 m from one loudspeaker and 3.6 m from the other. The speed of sound is 344 m/s. The frequency produced by the oscillator, for which destructive interference occurs at point P, in SI units, is closest to: Two loudspeakers placed 6.0 m apart are driven in phase by an audio oscillator,...
10. The figure shows two loudspeakers (A) and (B), and a point (C) where a listener is positioned. The speakers vibrate in phase and are playing a 65.0 Hz tone. The speed of sound is 343 m/s. The listener at point (C) hears the nearest no sound at a distance 6.00 m as measured from speaker (A). What is the separation (d) between the two speakers? m B d A C
The figure shows two loudspeakers (A) and (B), and a point (C)
where a listener is positioned. The speakers vibrate in phase and
are playing a 70.0 Hz tone. The speed of sound is 343 m/s. The
listener at point (C) hears the second nearest no sound at a
distance 6.50 m as measured from speaker (A). What is the
separation (d) between the two speakers?
https://general.physics.rutgers.edu/gifs/CJ/17-18.jpg
The figure shows two
loudspeakers (A) and (B), and a point (C) where a listener is
positioned. The speakers vibrate out of phase and are playing a
71.0 Hz tone. The speed of sound is 340 m/s. The listener at point
(C) hears the third constructive interference at a distance 4.50 m
as measured from speaker (A). What is the separation (d) between
the two speakers?
A 5m