Vocabulary
Pitch/ Frequency
Sound Source
Sound Traveling
Sound Receiver
100

A push or a pull that acts on an object 


Force

100

If a sound source vibrates slower, what happens to the pitch?

The pitch becomes lower.

100

Increasing the amplitude of a vibration makes the sound...

Louder

100

What do the air particles do as sound travels through them?

They vibrate back and forth in place, transferring energy to neighboring particles.

100

What part of your body is the sound receiver when you hear something?

The eardrum

200

Moving back and forth, or side to side, or up and down repeatedly, past its starting point 


vibrate

200

What does a low frequency sound graph look like?

less peaks and valleys 

big wavelength 

200

What does a sound source do to the particles around it?

t causes the nearby particles to vibrate, initiating the particle-to-particle collision through the medium that makes sound travel.

200

Why can sound travel through air but not through empty space?

Sound needs matter.  Particles to transfer the sound vibrations through collisions.

200

When sound reaches a receiver, what happens to it?

It will vibrate and deform past the starting point

300

Distance from the starting position to a peak or a valley


Amplitude

300

What determines a sounds pitch?

frequency (length of bars/strings)

300

Why does a vibrating object continue to vibrate even after you stop pushing on it?

The object will vibrate and deform past its starting point until their is no energy left


300

How do you know that no air particles left the ziploc bag in lesson 7 after a sound was played?

The mass stayed the same.

300

The density (chunk) of particle compression gets greater when the__________ of vibration at the sound source increases.

amplitude

400

The highness or lowness of a sound.

Pitch

400

On a motion graph of a vibrating object, how can you tell which sound is higher pitched?

Amount of peaks and valleys (frequency) and smaller wavelength 

400

What happens to a sound source’s vibrations when the sound has a higher pitch

The sound source vibrates faster, or with a higher frequency

400

The distance between chunks of particles appears to change when we change the ________ of vibration changes.

frequency 

400

Why do soft sounds do less damage to the ears than loud sounds?

  1. Small  force applied to the speaker


  1. Vibrates less past the starting point because it has less energy


  1. The vibrations cause the air particles in the medium to collide with each other and transfer little energy


  1. Small chunk of air particles collide into the eardrum with less force and transfer less energy



500

What does sound need to travel through?

Medium
500

Two sounds have the same amplitude but different frequencies. How will they sound different?

One could be a high, medium or low pitch at the same amplitude. 

500

Why can sound make another object move (like the window in the anchoring phenomenon)?

The sound source’s vibrations transfer energy through particle collisions in the medium, causing the sound receiver to vibrate and deform past its starting point.

500

Describe how sound travels from a sound source through a medium to a receiver

Vibrations from the source cause nearby particles in the medium to vibrate (depending on the amplitude); those particles collide with other particles, transferring the vibration and energy through the medium

500

Why did the quiet low pitch sounds do less damage to her ears than the quiet high pitch sounds?

  1. Quiet low pitch sounds transfer less energy less frequently. 


  1. The air particles in the medium are a small chunk and collide with the eardrum less frequently with less energy moving it a little past the starting point.  


3. This causes less damage to the ear drum.