scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Linear and nonlinear waves

Graham W. Griffiths, +1 more
- 09 Jul 2009 - 
- Vol. 4, Iss: 7, pp 4308
TLDR
The study of waves can be traced back to antiquity where philosophers, such as Pythagoras, studied the relation of pitch and length of string in musical instruments and the subject of classical acoustics was laid down and presented as a coherent whole by John William Strutt in his treatise Theory of Sound.
Abstract
The study of waves can be traced back to antiquity where philosophers, such as Pythagoras (c.560-480 BC), studied the relation of pitch and length of string in musical instruments. However, it was not until the work of Giovani Benedetti (1530-90), Isaac Beeckman (1588-1637) and Galileo (1564-1642) that the relationship between pitch and frequency was discovered. This started the science of acoustics, a term coined by Joseph Sauveur (1653-1716) who showed that strings can vibrate simultaneously at a fundamental frequency and at integral multiples that he called harmonics. Isaac Newton (1642-1727) was the first to calculate the speed of sound in his Principia. However, he assumed isothermal conditions so his value was too low compared with measured values. This discrepancy was resolved by Laplace (1749-1827) when he included adiabatic heating and cooling effects. The first analytical solution for a vibrating string was given by Brook Taylor (1685-1731). After this, advances were made by Daniel Bernoulli (1700-82), Leonard Euler (1707-83) and Jean d’Alembert (1717-83) who found the first solution to the linear wave equation, see section (3.2). Whilst others had shown that a wave can be represented as a sum of simple harmonic oscillations, it was Joseph Fourier (1768-1830) who conjectured that arbitrary functions can be represented by the superposition of an infinite sum of sines and cosines now known as the Fourier series. However, whilst his conjecture was controversial and not widely accepted at the time, Dirichlet subsequently provided a proof, in 1828, that all functions satisfying Dirichlet’s conditions (i.e. non-pathological piecewise continuous) could be represented by a convergent Fourier series. Finally, the subject of classical acoustics was laid down and presented as a coherent whole by John William Strutt (Lord Rayleigh, 1832-1901) in his treatise Theory of Sound. The science of modern acoustics has now moved into such diverse areas as sonar, auditoria, electronic amplifiers, etc.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

Convergence for PDEs with an arbitrary odd order spatial derivative term

TL;DR: For linear PDEs with an arbitrary odd order spatial derivative term, this article proved convergence of the first or second order for smooth and less smooth initial data for the first and second order.

Viscous shock wave tracing, local conservation laws, and pointwise estimates

TL;DR: In this article, a new approach to decompose a system of viscous conservation laws with respect to each characteristic wave structures is introduced, where the global wave interactions of the system are reduced to coupling of nonlinear waves around constant states outside shock region and a scalar conservation law in the shock region.
Dissertation

On Faraday waves and jets

TL;DR: In this article, a cylinder containing the object of interest is mounted on a vibration device which shakes the entire setup vertically, which generates period-doubled standing waves in the fluid and leads to very large amplitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometrical optics of dispersive media with turning points

TL;DR: In this article, the modification of the geometrical optics approximation developed in our earlier paper has been extended to problems in which the classical conditions for its validity are violated, e.g., turning points are present, and tunnelling and over-barrier reflection are studied.
DissertationDOI

Numerical methods for the dispersion analysis of Guided Waves

TL;DR: In this article, the dispersion analysis of wave propagation in complex translational invariant systems is studied using the Semi Analytical Finite Element (SAFE) method and the Boundary Element Method (2.5D BEM).
References
More filters
Book

The finite element method

TL;DR: In this article, the methodes are numeriques and the fonction de forme reference record created on 2005-11-18, modified on 2016-08-08.
Book

Mathematical Methods of Classical Mechanics

TL;DR: In this paper, Newtonian mechanics: experimental facts investigation of the equations of motion, variational principles Lagrangian mechanics on manifolds oscillations rigid bodies, differential forms symplectic manifolds canonical formalism introduction to pertubation theory.
Book

Linear and Nonlinear Waves

G. B. Whitham
TL;DR: In this paper, a general overview of the nonlinear theory of water wave dynamics is presented, including the Wave Equation, the Wave Hierarchies, and the Variational Method of Wave Dispersion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards the ultimate conservative difference scheme V. A second-order sequel to Godunov's method

TL;DR: In this article, a second-order extension of the Lagrangean method is proposed to integrate the equations of ideal compressible flow, which is based on the integral conservation laws and is dissipative, so that it can be used across shocks.
Book

Finite Volume Methods for Hyperbolic Problems

TL;DR: The CLAWPACK software as discussed by the authors is a popular tool for solving high-resolution hyperbolic problems with conservation laws and conservation laws of nonlinear scalar scalar conservation laws.