BELIEVE ME NOT! - - A SKEPTICs GUIDE
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This is a bogus ``derivation'' in that we start with a solution
to the WAVE EQUATION and then show what sort of
differential equation it satisfies. Of course,
once we have the equation we can work in the other direction,
so this is not so bad . . . .
Suppose we know that we have a traveling wave
.
At a fixed position (x= const) we see SHM in time:
|
(14.8) |
(Read: ``The second partial derivative
of A with respect to time [i.e. the acceleration of A]
with x held fixed is equal to
times A itself.'')
I.e. we must have a linear restoring force.
Similarly, if we take a ``snapshot'' (hold t fixed)
and look at the spatial variation of A, we find
the oscillatory behaviour analogous to SHM,
|
(14.9) |
(Read: ``The second partial derivative
of A with respect to position [i.e. the curvature of A]
with t held fixed is equal to -k2 times A itself.'')
Thus
If we multiply both sides by -k2, we get
But
so
, giving the WAVE EQUATION:
|
(14.10) |
In words, the curvature of A is equal to 1/c2 times
the acceleration of A at any (x,t) point
(what we call an event in spacetime).
Whenever you see this differential equation governing some quantity A,
i.e. where the acceleration of A is proportional to its curvature,
you know that A(x,t) will exhibit wave motion!
Next: Wavy Strings
Up: Waves
Previous: Speed of Propagation
Jess H. Brewer
1998-11-06