Leah.Midd
Member
does anyone no or can u reccomend an experiment to demonstrate the doppler effect???
yeha i no it isnt in the syllabus but our teacher has still set it as an assessment task....i need to use numbers and measurements, if u got anythign a bit more detailed would b helpfull?helper said:It isn't in the syllabus but the easiest examples are:
Listining to a car as it approaches you and goes past. Have the person put there hand on the horn to make it better
Swing a whistle around your head. Have an observer listen to the change in pitch as it approaches and goes away from them.
You want to go further, use a sound sensor to capture the sound and analyse the waveform to observe the shift.
Kant said:Hmm, a small trolley with a sound source on it, travelling at around 0.5ms-1 would probley do. Need a pulley, some cable and would need to build the small trolley, maybe wield one together. Make a constant tone with Cool Edit Pro, record it to CD and mount it on the trolley and play the sound via cd player.
or
How about a ball rolling down a tube, a sound source beams the rolling ball and reflects it back?
You would get 2 peaks on the oscilloscope. The "true" frequency and the reflected freq., Like sonar.You compare the differences between the peaks.