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The first figure shows the 4 possible cases for reflection and transmission at an interface. Lets solve the problem, which is shown in the next figure
since it must be that v v .
On the left side of the junction we have and on the right side of the junction we have At the boundary the wave must continuous, that is there are no kinks in it. Thus we must have
So from the first equation now solve for and Thus we can define the transmission coefficient and the refection coefficient note how the amplitudes can change at the boundary
If then we must have since and and must be fixed. We see that In this case we see that the amplitude of the wave gets bigger when it moves into a less dense medium. We have probably all experienced this in reallife. As waves come ashore they become bigger. This is because shallower water is effectively less dense. A tsumami in open ocean may have animperceptable amplitude but when it comes ashore it can be tremendous. This seems almost counter intuitive, but in any closed system the energy and powerare conserved but there is no rule saying amplitude has to be conserved.
Lets look at the reflected and transmitted power. Recall Power: For the incident and reflected waves and are the same so the reflected power coefficient (reflected power / incident power) To do transmitted power lets first rewrite the power equation. Recall Also so so now becomes or
Now lets look at the 4 specific cases we have:
Rigid wall
so Also So wave is reflected and inverted, but has same power
Free end
so Also So wave is reflected and has same power
Moving to higher density
so
Moving to lower density
so Note the transmitted wave's amplitude is larger than the original.
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