Determination of the Speed of Sound

From wwwelab
Revision as of 16:58, 12 March 2013 by Ist165721 (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Description of the Experiment

The purpose of this experiment is to determine the speed of sound.


Links

  • Video: rtsp://elabmc.ist.utl.pt:554/statsound.sdp
  • Laboratory: Advanced in e-lab.ist.eu[1]
  • Control room: statsound
  • Level: ****


<swf height="290" width="500">http://www.elab.tecnico.ulisboa.pt/anexos/descricoes-flash/StatSound.swf</swf>


Experimental Apparatus

The apparatus (sometimes referred as "Kundt's tube") consists in a PVC tube with 1458 mm in length. On one end there is a fixed speaker that can produce an audio sine, triangular or single pulse wave. On the opposite side there is a movable piston for changing the effective tube length. Along the tube there are several microphones to register the sound intensity at fixed points.

The following table shows the positions of the microphones in relation to the source (speaker):

Designation Distance to source (mm)
Mic 1 (reference) 250
Mic 2 (center) 750
Mic 3 (extreme) 1250
Mic 4 (embolus surface) Between 1260 e 1480
tube limit 1450
Table 1 – Microphones distance to the sound source (speaker's membrane)


The reference mic (Mic 1) should be used to verify that the emitted sound is the desired (i.e., there is no distortion caused by the speaker). On the piston surface is another microphone (Mic 4) capable of moving between 1269mm and 1475mm with it. The sound is acquired through 2 channels of a sound card: the left channel (CH 1) is always bounded to the reference microphone (Mic 1); the other channel (CH 2) can be connected to one of the other three microphones.

The experimental data is captured by the PC's sound-card and processed on-line (normalization) prior to be receive by the user.


Protocol

This apparatus can also be used for the stationary wave experiment and thus has two modes of operation: in the "Speed of sound" mode the amplitude of the wave is registered over time.

To determine \( v_{sound} \), the user must choose a "pulse" type of stimulus and measure the "time-of-flight" taken by the wave from Mic 1 and any other microphone. The speed can be determined with data from table 1 and the formula for speed determination:

\[ v_{sound} = \frac{\Delta s}{\Delta t} \] where \(s\) is the distance between the selected microphones. Of course, other waveforms could be used but this will require a close look at the signals phase.


Advanced Protocol

Using the coherence function between the acquired signals the phase determination can improve with higher accuracy among different microphones. Using an appropriate software package (like Matlab or Octave for instance) this phase is easily determined (mscohere). Pink or white noise are very suitable for that end as it won't exhibits any phase indetermination.


Links