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Standing Waves


  
Figure: Traveling vs. standing waves.
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A particularly interesting example of superposition is provided by the case where   A1 = A2 = A0 k1 = k2 = k  and   $\omega_1 = - \omega_2 = \omega$. That is, two otherwise identical waves propagating in opposite directions. The algebra is simple:

A(x,t) = $\displaystyle A_0 \left[ e^{i(k x - \omega t)}
+ e^{i(k x + \omega t)} \right] \cr$ (14.18)

The real part of this (which is all we ever actually use) describes a sinusoidal waveform of wavelength   $\lambda = 2\pi/k$  whose amplitude   $2 A_0 \cos(\omega t)$  oscillates in time but which does not propagate in the x direction - i.e. the lower half of Fig. 14.3. Standing waves are very common, especially in situations where a traveling wave is reflected from a boundary, since this automatically creates a second wave of similar amplitude and wavelength propagating back in the opposite direction - the very condition assumed at the beginning of this discussion.



Jess H. Brewer
1998-11-06