1. place 5 marbles along the groove in the ruler as shown on your handout. 2. now take a 6 th marble...

37
Sound

Upload: merry-jennings

Post on 16-Dec-2015

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Sound

Activity #1: Cannonball!

1. Place 5 marbles along the groove in the ruler as shown on your handout.

2. Now take a 6th marble and flick it against the end of the row.

3. Draw what happens.4. Describe what happens using complete

sentences.5. Why did this happen? Make sure you are

using the correct science vocabulary words.

What is Sound?Sound is a type of

energy made by vibrations.

When an object vibrates, it cause movement in the air particles.

These particles bump into the particles close to them, which causes them to vibrate too.

This causes them to bump into more air molecules

This movement, as energy is passed from one molecule to another is called sound waves.

If your ear is within range of the vibrations, you hear the sound.

SoundSound needs a

medium to travel Sound is a mechanical

wave and needs a medium for propagation or transmission.

Sound travels through solids, liquids and gases.

Sound does not travel in vacuum.

Vibrations create sound.

Vibrations are created from molecules moving back and forth.

Sound VocabularyPitch-the highness or

lowness of a sound

Sound- a series of vibrations that you can hear

Intensity-the measurable amount of a property, such as force, brightness, or a magnetic field.

Amplitude-the distance from crest to rest, trough to rest position of the wave. (VOLUME)

Vibration- the back and forth movement of a molecule

vocal chords- are part of your throat that vibrates when you speak

Echo- a sound reflection

Compressions are the regions of high pressure and density where the particles are crowded and are represented by the upper portion of the curve called crest.

Rarefactions are the regions of low pressure and densitywhere the particles are spread out and are represented by thelower portion of the curve called trough.

Activity #2: Rubber Band Vibrations

1. Stretch the thin long rubber band between your hands as shown in the diagram.

2. Have your partner pluck the center of the rubber band. What do you hear?

3. Now repeat this with the thick rubber band. What do you notice is the difference in sound?

4. What is the medium?

The higher the amplitude the louder the sound. The lower the amplitude the softer the sound.

How loud a sound is depends on the

amplitude!

HIGH amplitude is LOUDlow AMPLITUDE is quiet

The higher the frequency , the higher the pitch.The lower the frequency, the lower the pitch.

High Pitch

Low Pitch

High Pitch

Low Pitch

1. Place a ruler on the counter so that about half of the ruler sticks out beyond the counter’s edge.

2. Hold the ruler down firmly with one hand. With the other hand, press down on the free end of the ruler, then snap up.

3. Did you see the ruler vibrate?4. Did it make a sound?5. What is the medium?6. Move the ruler so that les is hanging off

the edge. How does the sound change?

Activity #3: Singing Ruler

Sound needs a medium to travel

Sound is a mechanical wave and needs a medium for transmission.

Sound travels through solids, liquids and gases.

Sound does not travel in vacuum.

Activity: Tap- Tap- TapListen carefully as

you tap your finger firmly and loudly against the table/ counter.

Now lay your ear on the table/ counter, and tap your finger loudly and firmly again.

Questions to think about!

1. Which time did you hear the sound of your tapping finger the loudest?

2. Based on this experiment, does sound travel better through solid materials (table) or gas materials (air)?

How does sound waves travel?Sound waves’

vibrations are parallel to the movement of the wave.

Sound travels faster through solids.

Sound waves travel in all directions but sound waves travel fastest in a solid.

1. Solid2. Liquid3. Gas

These vibrations are parallel to the movement of the wave

Sound Travels Through Matter

GasesMost of the sounds we hear travel through gases, such as air.

Sound waves travel slowly through the air.

For example: Sound from a bell, a horn, or an alarm clock travels through the air.

LiquidsSome sounds that we hear travel through water.

Sound waves travel a faster through water than through the air.

Sonar is the way to use sounds to locate objects under water.

What animals use sonar?

SolidsSome sounds that we hear travel through solids.

Sound waves travel very fast through solids.

For example: When you hit a drum, it vibrates, then the sound travels through the air, to your ears.

The Outer Ear: Pinna or AuricleThe outer ear, pinna,

catches the waveThis is the part of the ear

that people can see. The main job of the outer

ear is to collect sounds, whether they're your friend's whispers or a barking dog.

It's what people pierce to wear earrings and what your friend whispers into when it's time for a secret.

The outer ear also includes the ear canal, where wax is produced.

Earwax is that gunky stuff that protects the canal from bacteria and dirt to keep the ear canal clean.

The Middle Ear: Good Vibrations

After sound waves enter the outer ear, they travel through the ear canal and make their way to the middle ear.

The middle ear's main job is to take those sound waves and turn them into vibrations that are delivered to the inner ear.

To do this, it needs the eardrum, which is a thin piece of skin stretched tight like a drum.

The eardrum separates the outer ear from the middle ear and the ossicles

Ossicles are the three tiniest, most delicate bones in your body:Malleus- attached to the

eardrum Incus- is attached to the

malleus Stapes -the smallest

bone in the body, which is attached to the incus

The Middle Ear: Good VibrationsWhen sound waves

reach the eardrum, they cause the eardrum to vibrate.

When the eardrum vibrates, it moves the tiny ossicles — from the hammer to the anvil and then to the stirrup.

These bones help sound move along on its journey into the inner ear.

The Inner Ear: Nerve Signals Start Here

Sound comes into the inner ear as vibrations and enters the cochlea

Cochlea- a small, curled tube in the inner ear.

The cochlea is filled with liquid, which is set into motion, like a wave, when the ossicles vibrate.

The cochlea is also lined with tiny cells covered in tiny hairs that are so small you would need a microscope to see them.

When sound reaches the cochlea, the vibrations (sound) cause the hairs on the cells to move, creating nerve signals that the brain understands as sound.

The brain puts it together and hooray! You hear your favorite song on the radio.

Humans cannot hear sounds that vibrate:

• too fast (pitch is too high)

• too slow (pitch is too low)

•too large (volume is too loud)

•too small (volume is too soft)

Human hearing is limited to a range of sounds.

What causes damage to hearing?

• Exposure to loud noise.• Head trauma.• Virus or disease.• Autoimmune inner ear disease.• Hearing loss that runs in the

family.• Aging Malformation of the inner

ear.

How Sounds Are Made

We use our vocal cords to make sounds in our throat.

When we speak, our vocal cords vibrate.

Place your hand on your throat when you talk, and you can feel the vocal cords vibrate.

Voice Misuse/ Overuse-excessive talking and screaming

Throat CancerLaryngitis

Can your vocal cords become damaged?

Group Discussion: Tuning a Fork and Straw Music?1. What did you

observe?2. What is the

medium?3. Was a sound

created?4. What did you hear?5. What did you see?6. What appeared to be

vibrating?

Sound is a longitudinal wave

A vibrating object producing a series of compressions (C) and rarefaction (R).

Let’s Review!!!!

Review

Sound Waves

Sound waves are sent. The outer ear “catches the sound waves”. The middle ear takes the sound waves and

“vibrates” the eardrum. The inner ear sends the messages to the

brain.Middle Ear

Inner Ear

The brain puts it together and hooray! You hear your favorite song on the radio.

Outer Ear