Musical instruments and other objects are set into vibration
at their natural frequency when a person hits, strikes, strums, plucks or
somehow disturbs the object. For instance, a guitar string is strummed or
plucked; a piano string is hit with a hammer when a pedal is played; and the
tines of a tuning fork are hit with a rubber mallet. Whatever the case, a
person or thing puts energy into the instrument by direct contact with it. This
input of energy disturbs the particles and forces the object into vibrational
motion - at its natural frequency.
If you were to take a guitar string and stretch it to a given
length and a given tightness and have a friend pluck it, you would hear a
noise; but the noise would not even be close in comparison to the loudness
produced by an acoustic guitar. On the other hand, if the string is attached to
the sound box of the guitar, the vibrating string is capable of forcing the
sound box into vibrating at that same natural frequency. The sound box in turn
forces air particles inside the box into vibrational motion at the same natural
frequency as the string. The entire system (string, guitar, and enclosed air)
begins vibrating and forces surrounding air particles into vibrational motion.
The tendency of one object to force another adjoining or interconnectedobject into vibrational motion is referred to as
a forced vibration. In the case of the guitar
string mounted to the sound box, the fact that the surface area of the sound
box is greater than the surface area of the string means that more surrounding
air particles will be forced into vibration. This causes an increase in the amplitude
and thus loudness of the sound.
This same principle of a forced vibration is often demonstrated in a
Physics classroom using a tuning fork. If the tuning fork is held in your hand
and hit with a rubber mallet, a sound is produced as the tines of the tuning
fork set surrounding air particles into vibrational motion. The sound produced
by the tuning fork is barely audible to students in the back rows of the room.
However, if the tuning fork is set upon the whiteboard panel or the glass panel
of the overhead projector, the panel begins vibrating at the same natural
frequency of the tuning fork. The tuning fork forces surrounding glass (or
vinyl) particles into vibrational motion. The vibrating whiteboard or overhead
projector panel in turn forces surrounding air particles into vibrational
motion and the result is an increase in the amplitude
and thus loudness of the sound. This principle of forced
vibration explains why demonstration tuning forks are mounted on a sound box,
why a commercial music box mechanism is mounted on a sounding board, why a
guitar utilizes a sound box, and why a piano string is attached to a sounding
board. A louder sound is always produced when an accompanying object of greater
surface area is forced into vibration at the same natural frequency.
Now consider a related situation that resembles another
common Physics demonstration. Suppose that a tuning fork is mounted on a sound
box and set upon the table; and suppose a second tuning fork/sound box system having the same natural frequency (say 256 Hz) is placed on
the table near the first system. Neither of the tuning forks is vibrating.
Suppose the first tuning fork is struck with a rubber mallet and the tines
begin vibrating at its natural frequency - 256 Hz. These vibrations set its
sound box and the air inside the sound box vibrating at the same natural
frequency of 256 Hz. Surrounding air particles are set into vibrational motion
at the same natural frequency of 256 Hz and every student in the classroom
hears the sound. Then the tines of the tuning fork are grabbed to prevent their
vibration and remarkably the sound of 256 Hz is still being heard. Only now the
sound is being produced by the second tuning fork - the one which wasn't hit
with the mallet. Amazing!! The demonstration is often repeated to assure that
the same surprising results are observed. They are! What is happening?
In this demonstration, one tuning fork forces another tuning
fork into vibrational motion at the same natural frequency. The two forks are connected by the
surrounding air particles. As the air particles surrounding the first fork (and
its connected sound box) begin vibrating, the pressure waves that it creates
begin to impinge at a periodic and regular rate of 256 Hz upon the second
tuning fork (and its connected sound box). The energy carried by this sound
wave through the air is tuned to the
frequency of the second tuning fork. Since the incoming sound waves share the
same natural frequency as the second tuning fork, the tuning fork easily begins
vibrating at its natural frequency. This is an example of resonance - when one
object vibrating at the same natural frequency of a second object forces that
second object into vibrational motion.
The result of resonance is always a large vibration.
Regardless of the vibrating system, if resonance occurs, a large vibration
results. This is often demonstrated in a Physics class with an odd-looking
mechanical system resembling an inverted pendulum. The apparatus consists of
three sets of two identical plasticbobs mounted on
a very elastic metal pole, which are in turn mounted to a metal bar. Each metal
pole and attached bob has a different length, thus giving it a different
natural frequency of vibration. The bobs are often color-coded to distinguish
between them; they are colored red, blue
and green (a set of three colors that will
be significant later in The Physics Classroom Tutorial). The red
bobs are mounted on the longer poles and they have the lowest natural frequency
of vibration. The blue bobs are mounted on the shorter poles and have the
highest natural frequency of vibration. (Note the length-wavelength-frequency
relationship that was discussed earlier.) When the red bob is disturbed, it begins
vibrating at its natural frequency. This in turn forces the attached bar to
vibrate at the same frequency; and this forces the other attached red bob into
vibrating at the same natural frequency. This is resonance - one bob vibrating
at a given frequency forcing a second object with the same natural frequency
into vibrational motion. While the green and the blue bobs were disturbed by
the vibrations transmitted through the metal bar, only the red bob would
resonate. This is because the frequency of the first red bob is tuned to the
frequency of the second red bob; they share the same natural frequency. The
result is that the second red bob begins vibrating with a huge amplitude.
Another common classroom demonstration of resonance involves a plastic
tube containing an air column. The length of the air column was adjusted by
raising and lowering a reservoir of water (dyed red). The raising and lowering
of the reservoir adjusts the height of water in the open-air tube, and thus
adjusts the length of the air column inside the tube. As the length of the air
column is decreased, the natural frequency of the air column is increased.
(Again note the length-wavelength-frequency relationship that was
discussed earlier.) While adjusting the height of the liquid in the tube, a
vibrating tuning fork is held above the air column of the tube. When the
natural frequency of the air column is tuned to the
frequency of the vibrating tuning fork, resonance occurs and a loud sound
results. Quite amazingly, the vibrating tuning fork forces air particles within
the air column into vibrational motion. Once more in this resonance situation,
the tuning fork and the air column share the same vibrational frequency.
In conclusion, resonance occurs when two interconnected
objects share the same vibrational frequency. When one of the objects is
vibrating, it forces the second object into vibrational motion. The result is a
large vibration. And if a sound wave within the audible range of human hearing
is produced, a loud sound is heard.