Two in-phase speakers 2.0 m apart in a plane are emitting 1800 Hz sound waves into a room where the speed of sound is 340 m/s. Is the point 4.0 m in front of one of the speakers, perpendicular to the plane of the speakers, a point of maximumn constructive interference, maximum destructive interference, or something in between?

heelallev5

heelallev5

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2022-08-19

Two in-phase speakers 2.0 m apart in a plane are emitting 1800 Hz sound waves into a room where the speed of sound is 340 m/s. Is the point 4.0 m in front of one of the speakers, perpendicular to the plane of the speakers, a point of maximumn constructive interference, maximum destructive interference, or something in between?

Answer & Explanation

uiteensitnh

uiteensitnh

Beginner2022-08-20Added 9 answers

First of all, we must get the image right: the two loudspeakers are facing the same way, perpendicular to the line connecting them. Therefore, the point which we are interested in is 4 m away from one of the loudspeakers, and the distance from the other one can be found by the Pythagorean theorem to be
d 2 = 4 2 + 2 2 = 2 5
Clearly, the path difference is
d = 2 5 4 = 2 ( 5 2 )
If we write this path difference as a function of the wavelength, it will be given as
d = a λ .
where lambda is a positive constant. If a is an integer, the interference will be perfectly constructive; if it is given as the modulus 2 of an odd number (i.e. 1.5, 2.5, .159.5,..) then the interference is perfectly destructive. If it is none of these, then we have something inbetween. Let us find a to find the state of the point in question.
a = d λ = d v / f = d f v = 2 ( 1800 5 2 ) 340 = 2.5
Therefore, at the point in question we will have a perfect destructive interference.
Result:
Perfect destructive.

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