Physics, asked by ShawnMendes, 1 year ago

mode of vibration in open organ pipe??

Answers

Answered by akshu2000
7
In an open pipe, when a compressed wave reaches the far end, the air at that point is, for an instant, at a pressure greater than the atmospheric pressure. Being an open end, the air there can vibrate with maximum freedom and so, it suddenly expands into the surrounding air. Thus, the pressure diminishes so quickly that it becomes lesser than the pressure of the surrounding air, which causes a sudden rarefaction at the end of the pipe. This sets up a rarefied wave which passes back along the pipe. Within the tube, the reflected pulses meet the direct ones and the result is the formation of the standing waves.

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