Light Energy, Sound Energy
Light Energy, Sound Energy
Light Energy, Sound Energy
Get a clear glass. Put an object inside the glass. Look through the
sides of the glass. Now, are you able to see the object inside the
glass? Yes! Similarly, the rays of the sun can go through a glass
window. In both cases, light passes directly through glass. This
property of light is called transmission. A clear glass transmits
light so well, making the glass’s content visible from the outside.
-======
-
Why do you see cars, books, and people when they do not
produce their own light? These objects must reflect light in order
to be seen. Like a ball that bounces off a wall, light bounces
when it hits another object. This property of light is called
reflection. Reflection is the bouncing back of the light from the
surface it hits.
_
When sunlight or white light reaches a prism like a drop of water,
it separates light into many colors. We see this as a rainbow. This
shows that white light is made up of the whole range of colors
that the eyes can detect. When these colors combine, our eyes
see white.
When sunlight hits a red dress, all the other colors are absorbed
except red. The red component of the light bounces back. That is
why you see the red color of the dress. The absorbed colors are
the ones you do not see. You only see the colors that come
bouncing back to your eyes.
-
A sound wave moves outward in all directions from the vibrating
source. It travels through all forms of matter: solids, liquids, and
gases. The matter that supports the sound is called the medium.
Pitch describes how high or low a sound produced is. Sound with
less vibration has a lower pitch while that with more vibrations
has a higher pitch. The number of vibrations a sound energy
creates is called frequency. The frequency of sound determines
the pitch of a sound. The strings of a vq iolin vibrate more than
the strings of a bass guitar do. So, a violin has a high pitch and a
bass guitar has a low pitch.