Instructional Video4:19
FuseSchool

Sound Waves In Action

6th - Higher Ed
Sound Waves In Action | Waves | Physics | FuseSchool Did you know that birdsong is a disturbance? In this video we will look at how sound waves travel and see them in action: how a Ruben’s tube shows sound waves and how the human ear...
Instructional Video12:50
PBS

Sound Waves from the Beginning of Time

12th - Higher Ed
Invisible to the naked eye, our night sky is scattered with the 100s of billions of galaxies the fill the known universe. Like the stars, these galaxies form constellations – hidden patterns that echo the reverberations of matter and...
Instructional Video9:36
Bozeman Science

Sound Waves

12th - Higher Ed
Mr. Andersen explains how sound waves are created and perceived. A brief discussion of pitch and loudness are included. A generated sound of varying pitches is also included.
Instructional Video4:46
Curated Video

GCSE Physics - Sound Waves and Hearing #73

9th - Higher Ed
This video covers: - How sound waves travel through materials - The idea that sound waves are longitudinal - How wavelength changes with speed - The structure of the human ear and how it works - How the range of human hearing changes...
Instructional Video6:02
FuseSchool

Sound Wave Experiments

6th - Higher Ed
Sound Wave Experiments In this video, we are going to look at the factors that influence the speed of sound and how to measure it. We will look at sound waves in more detail in another video: Sound Waves Sound travels at about 340m/s in...
Instructional Video13:00
Curated Video

If a Tree Falls with No One Around, Does It Make a Sound? A Physics Perspective

12th - Higher Ed
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? Philosopher George Berkeley asked this famous question in 1710, and people are still debating it. Where is the forest located. How is sound defined? What...
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

Doppler Shift: Sound Discovery

6th - 12th
How a unique but simple experiment in the 19th century gave a new insight into the behaviour of sound waves. Physics - Waves - Learning Points. The Doppler Effect is when the pitch of a sound seems to change as it moves past. The...
Instructional Video3:38
Bozeman Science

Wave Energy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the energy of a wave if directly related to the amplitude of a wave. The wave energy of a sound wave is the volume of the wave.
Instructional Video5:25
Curated Video

Pitch and Loudness: Investigating Sound Waves on an Oscilloscope

9th - Higher Ed
This video explains how sound waves can be displayed on an oscilloscope and how the amplitude and frequency of the waveform relate to the loudness and pitch of the sound. The video uses examples of different sound waves and the...
Instructional Video3:08
Curated Video

Loudspeakers and the Motor Effect: Converting Electric Currents into Sound Waves

9th - Higher Ed
This is a lecture video explaining how loudspeakers work by utilizing the motor effect, which is when a current-carrying conductor experiences a force when placed in a magnetic field. The video demonstrates this effect on a conductor...
Instructional Video12:31
SciShow

What's the Loudest Possible Sound?

12th - Higher Ed
How many decibels would be recorded by the loudest sound waves your ears could possibly process? The loudest sound might be quieter than you think (because of how sound waves work)...or it might be louder than you think (because of how...
Instructional Video6:32
SciShow

Does Analog Music Really Sound Better Than Digital?

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone has that friend who loves records and insists that analog music is superior to digital. But is that true? Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him) Correction: Although this graphic can be found in many seemingly reputable sources, we've...
Instructional Video2:56
FuseSchool

Transverse & Longitudinal Waves

6th - Higher Ed
Waves transfer energy from one place to another. You should already know how to describe them in terms of frequency, wavelength and amplitude In this video we’re going to look at the two ways they can be classified. Waves are produced as...
Instructional Video2:46
Curated Video

Resonance: How Sound Changes Across Different Mediums

6th - 12th
Sounds can change as they move from one medium to another. Under the right circumstances the effect is surprising and extreme. Physics - Waves - Learning Points. Sound is a wave that is created by vibrating objects. Every object has a...
Instructional Video5:10
Curated Video

Changes of Medium: Waves Crossing Boundaries

9th - Higher Ed
This video is a lecture on how waves change as they cross the boundary between different materials, also known as changes of medium. The video explains what a medium is and how it affects wave propagation. The video uses examples of...
Instructional Video9:59
Curated Video

Measuring and Comparing the Speed of Sound in Air and Other Materials

9th - Higher Ed
This video provides an introduction to the speed of sound in air and demonstrates several methods to measure or calculate it. It also presents equations to calculate the speed of sound based on the wavelength and frequency of a sound...
Instructional Video4:27
Curated Video

Properties of Waves and Calculating Wave Speed

9th - Higher Ed
This video discusses the properties that all waves have in common, including amplitude and wavelength. It also demonstrates how to calculate the speed of a wave using the equation v = Fλ, where v is the wave speed, F is the frequency in...
Instructional Video4:47
Curated Video

Transverse and Longitudinal Waves: Understanding the Differences

9th - Higher Ed
This video is a lecture about waves, specifically transverse and longitudinal waves. The speaker defines what a wave is and explains how it transfers energy without any matter being transferred. The video then delves into the differences...
Instructional Video3:20
Curated Video

Categorizing Waves: Transverse and Longitudinal, Mechanical and Electromagnetic

9th - Higher Ed
The video explains how waves can be categorized according to two sets of criteria: transverse or longitudinal, and mechanical or electromagnetic. It gives examples of waves that fit each category, such as water waves as a transverse...
Instructional Video2:39
MinutePhysics

Gravitational Waves Explained Using Stick Figures

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about gravitational waves in the weak field limit as discovered by the LIGO collaboration, explained by parallels to electromagnetic radiation, sound waves, water waves, etc. I want to see Cat LIGO ASAP!
Instructional Video3:20
MinutePhysics

Gravitational Waves Explained Using Stick Figures

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about gravitational waves in the weak field limit as discovered by the LIGO collaboration, explained by parallels to electromagnetic radiation, sound waves, water waves, etc. I want to see Cat LIGO ASAP!
Instructional Video4:15
FuseSchool

Wave Behaviour

6th - Higher Ed
Wave Behaviour | Waves | Physics | FuseSchool How do waves behave? Badly? In this video we are going to look at how light and sound waves behave. Before we start, you should know that waves can be transverse or longitudinal....
Instructional Video3:40
Physics Girl

Singing plates - Standing Waves on Chladni plates

9th - 12th
Use physics to create cool patterns on a vibrating plate. How is this like a guitar string or a singing wine glass?
Instructional Video4:00
FuseSchool

PHYSICS - Waves - Wave Behaviour

6th - Higher Ed
How do waves behave? Badly? In this video we are going to look at how light and sound waves behave. Before we start, you should know that waves can be transverse or longitudinal. Transmission, reflection, refraction, diffraction,...

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