In this demonstration, we explore the superposition of two traveling sound waves. Each wave has a frequency (, ) and amplitude (, ). The displacement of each traveling wave as a function of position and time is:
By the Principle of Superposition, the resultant wave is the sum:
When the two frequencies are close but not equal, the superposition produces beats — a periodic variation in amplitude at the beat frequency:
The top two panels show each individual wave; the bottom panel shows their superposition. The title displays the computed beat frequency.
Some questions to consider while viewing the demonstration:
- Set . What does the superposition look like? What happens to the beat frequency?
- Set and . How many amplitude peaks appear per second in the superposition?
- How does changing the amplitudes affect the superposition when the two waves are out of phase?
- Identify a real-world situation where beats are heard between two sound sources.
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