An Introduction to Waves for Students (with its own activity sheet!)

An Introduction to Waves for Students (with its own activity sheet!)

What Are Waves and How Do They Work?

Introduction to Waves

  • Waves are disturbances that carry energy from one location to another, including various types such as slinky waves, sound waves, water waves, and seismic waves generated by earthquakes. These are classified as mechanical waves because they require a medium to travel through.

Types of Mechanical Waves

  • In a slinky wave, the slinky acts as the medium; movement in one coil causes adjacent coils to move. This basic process is common across all mechanical waves. When coils move perpendicular to the wave direction, it forms a transverse wave.
  • Transverse waves have particles moving up and down while the wave travels horizontally. An example includes Microsoft PowerPoint animations that create transverse wave effects by moving letters up and down.

Longitudinal Waves Explained

  • Longitudinal waves occur when coils move in the same direction as the wave travels; for instance, sound waves are longitudinal. Unlike mechanical waves, electromagnetic waves do not need a medium; light from the sun can travel through a vacuum between Earth and itself.

Understanding Wave Properties

Key Characteristics of Waves

  • A simple diagram can represent a transverse wave with two main components: crests (top) and troughs (bottom). The distance between consecutive crests or troughs defines wavelength (λ), measured in meters using the Greek letter lambda (λ). For example, if λ = 2 meters, it indicates this measurement directly.
  • Amplitude refers to the height of a crest or depth of a trough; for instance, an amplitude might be around 40 centimeters. When two waves meet, they pass through each other without altering their paths—this phenomenon is crucial for understanding light behavior at intersections.

Superposition Principle

  • When two overlapping wave pulses meet at opposite sides of a medium like a slinky, their amplitudes combine temporarily—a concept known as superposition—resulting in either increased or decreased overall amplitude before continuing on their paths.

Frequency and Human Hearing

Frequency Defined

  • Frequency (f) measures how many complete wavelengths pass a point per second and is expressed in hertz (Hz). For example:
  • A frequency of 1 Hz means one complete wavelength per second.
  • Increasing frequencies lead to more vibrations per second; humans can hear sounds above approximately 20 Hz up to about 20 kHz but may experience discomfort at higher frequencies like 9 kHz or beyond.

Exploring Electromagnetic Waves

Overview of Electromagnetic Concepts

  • The program introduces electromagnetic waves by discussing their relationship with electricity and magnetism along with historical figures like James Clerk Maxwell who theorized them and Heinrich Hertz who proved their existence.
  • It covers various types of electromagnetic radiation including radio waves, microwaves, infrared light (thermal imaging), visible light (lasers), ultraviolet light (skin damage risks), x-rays (radiography/therapy), and gamma rays used in industry applications. Worksheets related to these topics are available online for further study purposes.
Video description

View the question sheet for this video at https://liacoseducationalmedia.com/An-Introduction-to-Waves-for-Students-Activity-Sheet.pdf The video is actually an excerpt from a longer video called Shedding Light on Electromagnetic Waves. Visit the Shedding Light on Electromagnetic Waves page at https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-electromagnetic-waves. The entire video is available for schools that have ClickView, SAFARI Montage, or Learn360. Visit our website to view all our resources: https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com. A quick look at waves, including the different types of waves, how they behave, wave frequency, and wavelength. Liacos Educational Media is the creator of the famous Shedding Light series of videos. Visit the LEM website to see all our educational video and print resources. The 8-part Shedding Light on Atoms series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-atoms Show them periodically… How do we know about atoms if they’re too small to see? This series covers not just what we know about atoms but also how we know what we know about atoms. We discuss atoms, atomic structure, the periodic table, bonding, and a whole lot more! The 5-part Shedding Light on Electricity series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-electricity Ohm my goodness, this series is without parallel! The 8-part Shedding Light on Motion series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-motion Get your students up to speed… Using brilliant, live-action footage, this series makes it easy to teach speed, acceleration, Newton’s Laws of Motion, and a whole lot more! The 6-part Shedding Light on Light series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-light Let your students see it… This series looks at color, reflection and mirrors, refraction, lenses, the eye, electromagnetic waves, and a whole lot more! The 3-part Shedding Light on Energy series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-energy​ Make the change… This series looks at forms of energy, energy transformations, efficiency, human energy intake and expenditure, and at the two simple rules for weight loss; that’s right, there are only two! The 6-part Shedding Light on Heat series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-heat Hot stuff… This series covers heat energy, temperature, temperature scales, changes of state, thermal expansion, heat transfer, and how humans maintain a constant core temperature regardless of the conditions. The 5-part Shedding Light on the Sun and Earth series https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/shedding-light-on-the-sun-and-earth Essential Climate Science… The Sun illuminates and warms our precious planet. This series introduces students to the basics of climate science. We examine what causes seasons, how the movement of the sun across the sky affects the renewable-energy industry, and a whole lot more. Our videos, our online text book, and our student activity sheets make it • easier for teachers to teach and • easier for students to learn. https://www.liacoseducationalmedia.com/