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A piano tuner stretches a steel piano wire with a tension of 1000 n. the wire is 0.5 m long and has a mass of 5 g. what is the number of the highest harmonic that could be recorded by a computer that is capable of sensing frequencies up to 10,000 hz

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Answer: 1. B) 720 N

2. D) 2500 m

3. D) 408 Hz

4. C) 4m

5. A) 246 hz

6. D) 31st

7. B) the frequency of the sound is 100 Hz

8. C) 0.78 m

9. B) 16 Hz

10. B) 311 m/s

User Miquelvir
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The frequencies of the n-harmonics of a string is given by

f_n = (n)/(2L) \sqrt{ (T)/(\mu) }
where n is the number of the harmonic, L the length of the wire, T the tension and
\mu = (m)/(L) is the linear density, with m being the mass of the string.
Let's calculate the linear density first, using the mass
m=5 g=5 \cdot 10^(-3)kg:

\mu = (m)/(L) = (5\cdot 10^-3 kg)/(0.5 m)=0.01 kg/m
The problem says that the computer is able to analyze frequencies up to 10000 Hz. This means that we have to find the highest number of harmonic that generates a frequency smaller than this value. So, using
f=10000 Hz, the tension of the string
T=1000 N and the mass m and the length of the string L, we can re-arrange the previous formula to find which n corresponds to this frequency:

n = 2f_n L \sqrt{ (\mu)/(T) }=2 (10000 Hz)(0.5 m) \sqrt{ (0.01 kg/m)/(1000 N) }=31.6
And since n can only be integer, the highest harmonic that can be analyzed by the computer is n=31.
User Nitin Dandriyal
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