Consider a string having linear mass density of 0.40 g/m stretched to a length of 0.50 m by a tension of 75 N, vibrating at the 6th harmonic. It excites an open pipe into the second overtone. What is the length of the pipe
Consider a string having linear mass density of 0.40 g/m stretched to a length of 0.50...
A string with a linear mass density of 2.00 gm/m is stretched with a force of 150 N between two points that are 0.500 m apart. The frequency of the second mode of the stretched string is in tune with the fundamental frequency of an organ pipe filled with air and open at both ends. The velocity of sound in air at 0°C is 331 m/s. What is the length of the organ pipe? Answer choices are in cm thank...
A string of length 2.83 m and linear mass density 0.500 g/m, and a string of length 3.09 m and linear mass density 0.242 g/m, are tied together and stretched to a tension of 150 N. How long, in seconds, will it take a transverse wave to travel the entire length of the two wires?
A string with a mass per length of 2.00 g/m is stretched with a force of 120 N between two points that are 0.400 m apart. The fundamental frequency of the stretched string is in tune with the frequency of the second mode of an organ pipe filled with air at −20°C and open at both ends. The speed of sound in air at 0°C is 331 m/s. What is the length of the organ pipe?
A string with a linear mass density of 8:17x10^-2 kg/m is stretched to a tension of 7:41 N and held between two clamps which are 1:83 m apart. What is the frequency of the fundamental mode (the first harmonic) of this string?
The tension of a viola string of length of 31.9cm and density of 1.45g/cm resonates with the first overtone (second harmonic) of an open-close pipe of length 2.00m. The string tension is
A string of linear mass density 2.19 g/m is stretched by the weight of an adjustable mass m as shown. Near the end of the string a vibrator is attached at a constant but unknown frequency; the length of the string which vibrates is 2.39 m. For some values of the mass m n, the string resonates with the vibrator
1: Consider a string with 36.2 g mass and 39.6 cm length. Determine the linear density of the string (in kg/m unit). 2: Consider a string with 26.6 g mass and 90 cm length. If the tension in the string is 1.2 N, then determine the speed of the generated standing waves.
10a. A string of length 1 m and linear density of 0.035 kg/m is stretched between 2 posts with a tension of 667 N. What is the frequency of the first 5 modes? Sketch these 5 modes. b. Now assume that you are plucking the string at a distance of 20 cm from one end. What will be the first four lowest harmonic frequencies? (Hint: You don't have to recalculate use the results from part a)
chp. 12 #20
A string, 0.13 m long, vibrating in the n = 4 harmonic, excites an open pipe, 0.88 m long, into second overtone resonance. The speed of sound in air is 345 m/s. The velocity of transverse waves in the string, in SI units, is closest to: 34 32 36 30 38
006 10.0 points A stretched string is 200 cm long and has a linear density of 0.012 g/cm. What tension in the string will result in a second harmonic of 490 Hz? Answer in units of N.