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Standing Waves and Organ Pipes

Class 11 Physics notes covering standing waves, nodes, antinodes, harmonics, organ pipes, resonance, numericals and PYQs.

CBSENEETJEE MainJEE AdvancedIBICSEIGCSEA-Level

Standing Wave Pattern

Standing waves form when identical opposite waves superpose. Fixed nodes and vibrating antinodes appear.

Organ Pipe Boundary Conditions

Open end is displacement antinode and pressure node. Closed end is displacement node and pressure antinode.

Harmonics

Open pipes support all harmonics; closed pipes support only odd harmonics.

Concept

Introduction

Standing waves and organ pipes are among the most scoring parts of Class 11 waves because a small set of boundary conditions produces many exam questions. The topic connects superposition, resonance, musical instruments and sound columns.

A standing wave does not carry energy forward like a progressive wave. Instead, fixed nodes and vibrating antinodes form because two identical waves travel in opposite directions and superpose.

Real-life examples include a plucked guitar string, air columns in flutes, resonance tube experiments, organ pipes and vibrating strings in musical instruments.

Exam perspective: the most common trap is confusing displacement nodes with pressure nodes in air columns. In sound columns, displacement node corresponds to pressure antinode and displacement antinode corresponds to pressure node.

Exam FocusMemory trick: open end is displacement open, so antinode.
Exam FocusClosed end is displacement blocked, so node.
Concept

Standing Waves

A standing wave is formed by superposition of two waves of same amplitude, same frequency and same speed travelling in opposite directions. If y1 = A sin(ωt - kx) and y2 = A sin(ωt + kx), then the resultant is y = 2A sinωt coskx depending on chosen phase form.

In this expression, the amplitude depends on position: 2A|cos kx|. Therefore some points always have zero amplitude and some points have maximum amplitude. Fixed zero-amplitude points are nodes and maximum-amplitude points are antinodes.

Physical meaning: standing waves store energy in loops rather than transporting it continuously along the medium. Energy oscillates between kinetic and potential forms in each segment.

Real-life example: when a guitar string is plucked, the reflected wave from the fixed end superposes with incident waves and only certain standing wave patterns survive strongly.

Common trap: a standing wave pattern has no net energy transport along the string, but particles between nodes are still vibrating.

Exam FocusStanding wave = incident + reflected waves.
Exam FocusAmplitude is position-dependent.
Exam FocusNodes do not move.
Concept

Nodes and Antinodes

A node is a point in a standing wave where displacement is always zero. An antinode is a point where displacement amplitude is maximum.

Consecutive nodes are separated by λ/2. Consecutive antinodes are also separated by λ/2. A node and its adjacent antinode are separated by λ/4.

For a string fixed at both ends, both ends are displacement nodes. For an open air column end, the air particles can move freely, so it is a displacement antinode.

Real-life example: in a vibrating string fixed at both ends, the ends stay still while the middle of the fundamental mode vibrates with maximum amplitude.

Exam trap: do not call the middle of every pattern an antinode blindly. First identify the boundary conditions and mode.

Exam FocusNode: zero displacement.
Exam FocusAntinode: maximum displacement.
Exam FocusN to adjacent A = λ/4.
Concept

Pressure Nodes and Pressure Antinodes

In sound waves inside organ pipes, displacement and pressure conditions are opposite. A displacement node is a pressure antinode, and a displacement antinode is a pressure node.

At a closed end, air cannot move, so displacement node forms. Because air is strongly compressed and rarefied there, pressure variation is maximum, so it is a pressure antinode.

At an open end, air moves freely, so displacement antinode forms. Pressure remains nearly atmospheric, so pressure variation is minimum, making it a pressure node.

This is heavily tested in NEET and JEE because students memorize open end as antinode but forget that it means displacement antinode, not pressure antinode.

Real-life example: in a resonance tube closed by water at the bottom, the water surface is a displacement node and pressure antinode.

Exam FocusDisplacement node = pressure antinode.
Exam FocusDisplacement antinode = pressure node.
Exam FocusOpen end: pressure node. Closed end: pressure antinode.
Concept

Fundamental Mode

The fundamental mode is the lowest frequency standing wave that satisfies the boundary conditions of the system. It is also called the first harmonic.

For a string fixed at both ends, the fundamental has one loop and L = λ/2. Therefore f1 = v/2L.

For an open organ pipe, both ends are displacement antinodes, so the fundamental also satisfies L = λ/2 and f1 = v/2L.

For a closed organ pipe, one end is a displacement node and the other is a displacement antinode, so the fundamental satisfies L = λ/4 and f1 = v/4L.

Memory trick: same-same ends give half wavelength; different ends give quarter wavelength.

Exam FocusFundamental = first harmonic.
Exam FocusOpen pipe fundamental: v/2L.
Exam FocusClosed pipe fundamental: v/4L.
Concept

Harmonics

Harmonics are frequencies that are integral multiples of the fundamental frequency. The first harmonic is f1, second harmonic is 2f1, third harmonic is 3f1, and so on.

Open pipes support all harmonics: fn = nv/2L for n = 1, 2, 3, 4...

Closed pipes support only odd harmonics: fn = nv/4L where n = 1, 3, 5, 7... Even harmonics are absent because they cannot satisfy node-antinode boundary conditions.

Real-life example: a flute, approximately an open pipe, can produce a full harmonic series; a closed pipe has a different tonal quality due to missing even harmonics.

Exam trap: the 'second mode' of a closed pipe is the third harmonic, not the second harmonic.

Exam FocusOpen pipe: all harmonics.
Exam FocusClosed pipe: odd harmonics only.
Exam FocusSecond mode closed pipe = third harmonic.
Concept

Open Organ Pipe

An open organ pipe is open at both ends. Since air is free to vibrate at both ends, both ends are displacement antinodes and pressure nodes.

Fundamental mode: f1 = v/2L. First harmonic has one half-wavelength inside the pipe.

Second harmonic: f2 = 2v/2L = v/L. Third harmonic: f3 = 3v/2L. In general fn = nv/2L.

Real-life example: many wind instruments behave approximately as open pipes depending on fingering and end correction.

Common mistake: forgetting that open ends are pressure nodes, not pressure antinodes.

Exam FocusOpen-open means antinode-antinode for displacement.
Exam FocusAll harmonics present.
Exam FocusFrequency spacing is v/2L.
Concept

Closed Organ Pipe

A closed organ pipe is closed at one end and open at the other. The closed end is a displacement node and pressure antinode. The open end is a displacement antinode and pressure node.

Fundamental mode: f1 = v/4L. The pipe length contains one quarter wavelength.

Next allowed modes are f3 = 3v/4L and f5 = 5v/4L. Only odd harmonics are present.

Even harmonics are absent because a pattern with even multiples cannot keep a node at one end and an antinode at the other end simultaneously.

Real-life example: a bottle blown at the mouth behaves like a closed air column.

Exam FocusClosed-open means node-antinode.
Exam FocusOnly odd harmonics.
Exam FocusMode sequence: 1st, 3rd, 5th...
Concept

Resonance

Resonance occurs when a system is driven at one of its natural frequencies, producing large amplitude oscillations. In air columns, resonance happens when the column length fits an allowed standing wave pattern.

In the resonance tube experiment, a tuning fork is held above an adjustable air column. Loud sound occurs when the air column resonates with the tuning fork frequency.

For a closed resonance tube, first resonance approximately satisfies L = λ/4, and the next resonance satisfies L = 3λ/4. The difference between successive resonance lengths is λ/2.

Practical applications include musical instruments, organ pipes, tuning of wind instruments, acoustic cavities and measurement of speed of sound.

Common trap: resonance does not mean any loud sound; it means driving frequency matches a natural frequency.

Exam FocusResonance: driving frequency = natural frequency.
Exam FocusClosed tube first resonance: L = λ/4.
Exam FocusSuccessive resonance difference = λ/2.
NCERT Style

Standing Wave and Organ Pipe Diagrams

These diagrams use black curves with red labels and arrows in a clean board-work style.

Standing Wave

loops vibrate up and down, nodes stay fixedstanding wave from superposition of opposite travelling waves

Nodes and Antinodes

NNA node-node = λ/2, antinode-antinode = λ/2, node-adjacent antinode = λ/4

Pressure Nodes and Antinodes

displacement pattern pressure variation displacement node → pressure antinode; displacement antinode → pressure node

Resonance Tube

L open end: antinodewater end: node first resonance approximately L = λ/4

Open Pipe Fundamental: First Harmonic

open end: displacement antinode open end: displacement antinode f1 = 1v/2L

Open Pipe Second Harmonic

open end: displacement antinode open end: displacement antinode f2 = 2v/2L

Open Pipe Third Harmonic

open end: displacement antinode open end: displacement antinode f3 = 3v/2L

Closed Pipe Fundamental: First Harmonic

closed end: displacement node open end: displacement antinode f1 = 1v/4L

Closed Pipe Third Harmonic

closed end: displacement node open end: displacement antinode f3 = 3v/4L

Closed Pipe Fifth Harmonic

closed end: displacement node open end: displacement antinode f5 = 5v/4L
Comparison

Open Pipe vs Closed Pipe

PointOpen Organ PipeClosed Organ Pipe
Boundary conditionsDisplacement antinode at both ends; pressure node at both ends.Displacement node at closed end and antinode at open end; pressure antinode at closed end and node at open end.
Fundamentalf1 = v/2Lf1 = v/4L
HarmonicsAll harmonics present.Only odd harmonics present.
Frequency seriesv/2L, 2v/2L, 3v/2L...v/4L, 3v/4L, 5v/4L...
Exam trickn = 1,2,3,4...n = 1,3,5...; second mode is third harmonic.
Formula

Premium Formula Cards

Node SpacingN-N = λ/2

Consecutive nodes and consecutive antinodes are separated by half wavelength.

Node to AntinodeN-A = λ/4

Adjacent node and antinode are separated by quarter wavelength.

Open Pipefn = nv/2L

All harmonics: n = 1, 2, 3...

Closed Pipefn = nv/4L

Only odd n: 1, 3, 5...

Resonance TubeL2 - L1 = λ/2

Successive resonance lengths in a closed tube differ by half wavelength.

Wave Speedv = fλ

Used after finding wavelength from pipe geometry.

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Solved

40 High-Quality Solved Numericals

These numericals avoid data-only repetition and cover node spacing, harmonics, open pipe, closed pipe, resonance tube, pressure/displacement conditions and mixed comparison questions.

Numerical 1CBSE Easy

An open pipe of length 0.5 m has sound speed 340 m s−1. Find fundamental frequency.

Show Solution

Given: L = 0.5 m, v = 340

Formula: f1 = v/2L

Solution: f1 = 340/(2 × 0.5) = 340 Hz

Final Answer: 340 Hz

Numerical 2CBSE Easy

A closed pipe of length 0.5 m has sound speed 340 m s−1. Find fundamental frequency.

Show Solution

Given: L = 0.5 m, v = 340

Formula: f1 = v/4L

Solution: f1 = 340/(4 × 0.5) = 170 Hz

Final Answer: 170 Hz

Numerical 3CBSE Easy

Find distance between two consecutive nodes in a standing wave of wavelength 2 m.

Show Solution

Given: λ = 2 m

Formula: Node-node distance = λ/2

Solution: distance = 1 m

Final Answer: 1 m

Numerical 4CBSE Easy

Find distance between a node and adjacent antinode if wavelength is 1.2 m.

Show Solution

Given: λ = 1.2 m

Formula: N-A distance = λ/4

Solution: distance = 0.3 m

Final Answer: 0.3 m

Numerical 5CBSE Medium

An open pipe has f1 = 250 Hz. Find second and third harmonics.

Show Solution

Given: f1 = 250 Hz

Formula: fn = nf1

Solution: f2 = 500 Hz, f3 = 750 Hz

Final Answer: 500 Hz, 750 Hz

Numerical 6CBSE Medium

A closed pipe has f1 = 120 Hz. Find next two allowed frequencies.

Show Solution

Given: Closed pipe has odd harmonics

Formula: f3 = 3f1, f5 = 5f1

Solution: f3 = 360 Hz, f5 = 600 Hz

Final Answer: 360 Hz, 600 Hz

Numerical 7CBSE Medium

A string fixed at both ends has length 1 m and wave speed 100 m s−1. Find fundamental.

Show Solution

Given: L = 1 m, v = 100

Formula: f1 = v/2L

Solution: f1 = 100/2 = 50 Hz

Final Answer: 50 Hz

Numerical 8CBSE Medium

A standing wave has 5 nodes including ends over length 2 m on a string. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: 5 nodes mean 4 loops, each loop = λ/2

Formula: L = 4(λ/2)

Solution: 2 = 2λ, so λ = 1 m

Final Answer: 1 m

Numerical 9NEET Easy

For a closed pipe, identify the displacement condition at closed end.

Show Solution

Given: Closed end blocks air motion

Formula: Closed end is displacement node

Solution: Pressure variation is maximum there

Final Answer: Displacement node

Numerical 10NEET Easy

For an open end of pipe, identify pressure condition.

Show Solution

Given: Open end pressure remains atmospheric

Formula: Open end is pressure node

Solution: Displacement is antinode there

Final Answer: Pressure node

Numerical 11NEET Medium

An open pipe is 85 cm long. Speed is 340 m s−1. Find fundamental frequency.

Show Solution

Given: L = 0.85 m, v = 340

Formula: f1 = v/2L

Solution: f1 = 340/1.7 = 200 Hz

Final Answer: 200 Hz

Numerical 12NEET Medium

A closed pipe is 85 cm long. Speed is 340 m s−1. Find fundamental frequency.

Show Solution

Given: L = 0.85 m, v = 340

Formula: f1 = v/4L

Solution: f1 = 340/3.4 = 100 Hz

Final Answer: 100 Hz

Numerical 13NEET Medium

An open pipe produces 400 Hz as second harmonic. Find fundamental.

Show Solution

Given: f2 = 400 Hz

Formula: Open pipe f2 = 2f1

Solution: f1 = 200 Hz

Final Answer: 200 Hz

Numerical 14NEET Medium

A closed pipe produces 900 Hz as third harmonic. Find fundamental.

Show Solution

Given: f3 = 900 Hz

Formula: f3 = 3f1

Solution: f1 = 300 Hz

Final Answer: 300 Hz

Numerical 15NEET Medium

A closed pipe fundamental is 150 Hz. Is 300 Hz allowed?

Show Solution

Given: Closed pipe only odd harmonics

Formula: Allowed: 150, 450, 750...

Solution: 300 Hz is second harmonic, absent

Final Answer: Not allowed

Numerical 16NEET Medium

An open pipe fundamental is 150 Hz. Is 300 Hz allowed?

Show Solution

Given: Open pipe all harmonics

Formula: f2 = 2f1

Solution: 300 Hz is allowed

Final Answer: Allowed

Numerical 17NEET Difficult

First and second resonance lengths in closed tube differ by 17 cm. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: L2 - L1 = λ/2 = 17 cm

Formula: λ = 2ΔL

Solution: λ = 34 cm = 0.34 m

Final Answer: 0.34 m

Numerical 18NEET Difficult

A tuning fork frequency is 500 Hz and resonance length difference is 34 cm. Find sound speed.

Show Solution

Given: ΔL = 0.34 m, f = 500

Formula: λ = 2ΔL, v = fλ

Solution: λ = 0.68 m; v = 500 × 0.68 = 340 m s−1

Final Answer: 340 m s−1

Numerical 19NEET Difficult

An open pipe and closed pipe have same length. Find ratio of their fundamental frequencies.

Show Solution

Given: Same L and v

Formula: fopen = v/2L, fclosed = v/4L

Solution: ratio = 2:1

Final Answer: 2:1

Numerical 20NEET Difficult

A closed pipe has third harmonic equal to open pipe fundamental of same length? Find ratio.

Show Solution

Given: fclosed,3 = 3v/4L, fopen,1 = v/2L

Formula: ratio = (3v/4L)/(v/2L)

Solution: ratio = 3/2

Final Answer: 3:2

Numerical 21JEE Main Easy

For y = 2A sinωt coskx, find node condition.

Show Solution

Given: Amplitude factor = 2A|coskx|

Formula: Node when coskx = 0

Solution: kx = (2n+1)π/2

Final Answer: kx = (2n+1)π/2

Numerical 22JEE Main Easy

For y = 2A sinωt sinkx, find node condition.

Show Solution

Given: Amplitude factor = 2A|sinkx|

Formula: Node when sinkx = 0

Solution: kx = nπ

Final Answer: kx = nπ

Numerical 23JEE Main Medium

A string of length 1.5 m fixed at both ends vibrates in third harmonic. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: L = 1.5 m, n = 3

Formula: L = nλ/2

Solution: λ = 2L/n = 3/3 = 1 m

Final Answer: 1 m

Numerical 24JEE Main Medium

An open pipe of length 1.2 m vibrates in third harmonic. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: Open pipe: L = nλ/2, n = 3

Formula: λ = 2L/n

Solution: λ = 2.4/3 = 0.8 m

Final Answer: 0.8 m

Numerical 25JEE Main Medium

A closed pipe of length 1.2 m vibrates in fifth harmonic. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: Closed pipe: L = nλ/4, n = 5

Formula: λ = 4L/n

Solution: λ = 4.8/5 = 0.96 m

Final Answer: 0.96 m

Numerical 26JEE Main Medium

Open pipe length 0.75 m, sound speed 330 m s−1. Find first three frequencies.

Show Solution

Given: L=0.75, v=330

Formula: fn=nv/2L

Solution: f1=220 Hz, f2=440 Hz, f3=660 Hz

Final Answer: 220, 440, 660 Hz

Numerical 27JEE Main Medium

Closed pipe length 0.75 m, sound speed 330 m s−1. Find first three allowed frequencies.

Show Solution

Given: L=0.75, v=330

Formula: f = nv/4L, n=1,3,5

Solution: f1=110 Hz, f3=330 Hz, f5=550 Hz

Final Answer: 110, 330, 550 Hz

Numerical 28JEE Main Difficult

An open pipe's third harmonic is 900 Hz. Find length if v = 360 m s−1.

Show Solution

Given: n=3, f=900, v=360

Formula: f3 = 3v/2L

Solution: L = 3v/(2f) = 1080/1800 = 0.6 m

Final Answer: 0.6 m

Numerical 29JEE Main Difficult

A closed pipe's fifth harmonic is 850 Hz. Find length if v = 340 m s−1.

Show Solution

Given: n=5, f=850, v=340

Formula: f5=5v/4L

Solution: L = 5v/(4f)=1700/3400=0.5 m

Final Answer: 0.5 m

Numerical 30JEE Main Difficult

A pipe closed at one end resonates at 170 Hz and 510 Hz. Identify missing harmonic between them.

Show Solution

Given: Closed pipe odd harmonics

Formula: Allowed: f, 3f, 5f...

Solution: 170 and 510 = 1st and 3rd; 340 Hz even harmonic absent

Final Answer: 340 Hz absent

Numerical 31JEE Advanced

Two successive resonances in closed tube are 20 cm and 60 cm. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: Difference = 40 cm = λ/2

Formula: λ = 2 × 40 cm

Solution: λ = 80 cm = 0.8 m

Final Answer: 0.8 m

Numerical 32JEE Advanced

A closed tube first resonance length is 16 cm. Ignoring end correction, find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: L = λ/4

Formula: λ = 4L

Solution: λ = 64 cm

Final Answer: 64 cm

Numerical 33JEE Advanced

An open pipe and a closed pipe have fundamentals equal. If open pipe length is 1 m, find closed pipe length.

Show Solution

Given: v/2Lo = v/4Lc

Formula: 2Lc = Lo

Solution: Lc = 0.5 m

Final Answer: 0.5 m

Numerical 34JEE Advanced

A closed pipe fundamental equals second harmonic of an open pipe. Find Lclosed/Lopen.

Show Solution

Given: v/4Lc = 2v/2Lo = v/Lo

Formula: 1/4Lc = 1/Lo

Solution: Lo = 4Lc

Final Answer: 1/4

Numerical 35JEE Advanced

A string fixed at both ends has 6 antinodes. If length is 3 m, find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: 6 antinodes = 6 loops

Formula: L = 6λ/2

Solution: 3 = 3λ, λ = 1 m

Final Answer: 1 m

Numerical 36JEE Advanced

A standing wave on a string has adjacent node-antinode distance 0.15 m. Find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: N-A = λ/4 = 0.15

Formula: λ = 4 × 0.15

Solution: λ = 0.60 m

Final Answer: 0.60 m

Numerical 37JEE Advanced

A closed pipe has first resonance at 15 cm and next at 45 cm. Find end correction if actual condition L+e = λ/4 for first and L+e = 3λ/4 for second.

Show Solution

Given: L1=15 cm, L2=45 cm

Formula: L2-L1=λ/2

Solution: λ=60 cm; L1+e=15 cm, so e=0

Final Answer: 0 cm

Numerical 38JEE Advanced

If end correction e = 1 cm and first resonance length is 16 cm, find wavelength.

Show Solution

Given: L+e = λ/4

Formula: λ = 4(16+1) cm

Solution: λ = 68 cm

Final Answer: 68 cm

Numerical 39IB

An open pipe has length 0.68 m and v=340 m s−1. Find fundamental.

Show Solution

Given: L=0.68, v=340

Formula: f1=v/2L

Solution: f1=340/1.36=250 Hz

Final Answer: 250 Hz

Numerical 40IGCSE

A closed pipe has fundamental wavelength 1.6 m. Find pipe length.

Show Solution

Given: Closed fundamental L=λ/4

Formula: L=1.6/4

Solution: L=0.4 m

Final Answer: 0.4 m

Numerical 41A-Level

An open pipe has fundamental wavelength 1.6 m. Find pipe length.

Show Solution

Given: Open fundamental L=λ/2

Formula: L=1.6/2

Solution: L=0.8 m

Final Answer: 0.8 m

Numerical 42A-Level

A resonance tube gives consecutive resonances at 18 cm and 52 cm. If fork frequency is 500 Hz, find speed.

Show Solution

Given: Difference=34 cm=λ/2

Formula: λ=0.68 m, v=fλ

Solution: v=500×0.68=340 m s−1

Final Answer: 340 m s−1

Question Bank

60 PYQs and Exam Questions

Question 1CBSE

Define standing wave.

Show Answer

A wave pattern with fixed nodes and antinodes formed by superposition of opposite travelling waves.

Question 2CBSE

Define node.

Show Answer

Point where displacement is always zero.

Question 3CBSE

Define antinode.

Show Answer

Point where displacement amplitude is maximum.

Question 4CBSE

Distance between consecutive nodes?

Show Answer

λ/2.

Question 5CBSE

Distance between node and adjacent antinode?

Show Answer

λ/4.

Question 6CBSE

What is fundamental mode?

Show Answer

Lowest frequency mode satisfying boundary conditions.

Question 7CBSE

First harmonic means what?

Show Answer

Fundamental frequency.

Question 8CBSE

Open pipe fundamental formula?

Show Answer

f1 = v/2L.

Question 9CBSE

Closed pipe fundamental formula?

Show Answer

f1 = v/4L.

Question 10CBSE

What is resonance?

Show Answer

Large amplitude vibration when driving frequency equals natural frequency.

Question 11NEET

At displacement node, what is pressure condition?

Show Answer

Pressure antinode.

Question 12NEET

At displacement antinode, what is pressure condition?

Show Answer

Pressure node.

Question 13NEET

Open end of organ pipe is displacement node or antinode?

Show Answer

Displacement antinode.

Question 14NEET

Closed end of organ pipe is displacement node or antinode?

Show Answer

Displacement node.

Question 15NEET

Open end is pressure node or pressure antinode?

Show Answer

Pressure node.

Question 16NEET

Closed end is pressure node or pressure antinode?

Show Answer

Pressure antinode.

Question 17NEET

Which harmonics are present in closed pipe?

Show Answer

Only odd harmonics.

Question 18NEET

Which harmonics are present in open pipe?

Show Answer

All harmonics.

Question 19NEET

Why are even harmonics absent in closed pipe?

Show Answer

They do not satisfy node-antinode boundary conditions.

Question 20NEET

Second mode of closed pipe is which harmonic?

Show Answer

Third harmonic.

Question 21JEE Main

Derive standing wave from two opposite waves.

Show Answer

Adding equal opposite waves gives product form with position-dependent amplitude.

Question 22JEE Main

For fixed string ends, what are end conditions?

Show Answer

Displacement nodes at both ends.

Question 23JEE Main

For open pipe ends, what are displacement conditions?

Show Answer

Displacement antinodes at both ends.

Question 24JEE Main

For closed pipe, what are displacement conditions?

Show Answer

Node at closed end and antinode at open end.

Question 25JEE Main

Formula for nth harmonic of open pipe?

Show Answer

fn = nv/2L.

Question 26JEE Main

Formula for closed pipe harmonics?

Show Answer

fn = nv/4L for n = 1, 3, 5...

Question 27JEE Advanced

Condition for nodes in y=2A sinωt sinkx?

Show Answer

sinkx=0, so x=nλ/2.

Question 28JEE Advanced

Condition for antinodes in y=2A sinωt sinkx?

Show Answer

|sinkx|=1, so x=(2n+1)λ/4.

Question 29JEE Advanced

Does a standing wave transfer net energy along medium?

Show Answer

No net energy transport along the medium.

Question 30JEE Advanced

What is energy distribution in standing wave?

Show Answer

Energy is localized in loops and oscillates between kinetic and potential forms.

Question 31JEE Advanced

Why is open pipe fundamental same form as string fixed at both ends?

Show Answer

Both fit half a wavelength in length, though boundary types differ for displacement.

Question 32IB

What is the difference between progressive and standing wave?

Show Answer

Progressive wave transfers energy; standing wave has fixed nodes and no net energy transport.

Question 33IB

What is a normal mode?

Show Answer

An allowed standing wave pattern satisfying boundary conditions.

Question 34IB

What decides allowed frequencies in organ pipes?

Show Answer

Boundary conditions and pipe length.

Question 35IB

What happens at resonance in an air column?

Show Answer

Amplitude of sound becomes large.

Question 36ICSE

Give one example of standing wave.

Show Answer

Vibrating guitar string or air column in organ pipe.

Question 37ICSE

What is harmonic?

Show Answer

Frequency component that is an integral multiple of fundamental.

Question 38ICSE

What are overtones?

Show Answer

Frequencies above the fundamental.

Question 39ICSE

First overtone in closed pipe is which harmonic?

Show Answer

Third harmonic.

Question 40IGCSE

Open pipe of length L has fundamental wavelength?

Show Answer

2L.

Question 41IGCSE

Closed pipe of length L has fundamental wavelength?

Show Answer

4L.

Question 42IGCSE

What is a node in a rope standing wave?

Show Answer

Point of no displacement.

Question 43IGCSE

What is an antinode in a rope standing wave?

Show Answer

Point of maximum displacement.

Question 44A-Level

Why are boundary conditions important?

Show Answer

They determine allowed wavelengths and frequencies.

Question 45A-Level

What is pressure node at open end physically?

Show Answer

Pressure variation is approximately zero because pressure remains atmospheric.

Question 46A-Level

What is pressure antinode at closed end physically?

Show Answer

Pressure variation is maximum because air cannot move freely.

Question 47A-Level

Successive resonance lengths in closed tube differ by what?

Show Answer

λ/2.

Question 48Assertion-Reason

Assertion: Closed pipe has only odd harmonics. Reason: One end is node and other is antinode.

Show Answer

Both true and reason explains assertion.

Question 49Assertion-Reason

Assertion: Open pipe has all harmonics. Reason: Both ends are displacement antinodes.

Show Answer

Both true and reason explains assertion.

Question 50Assertion-Reason

Assertion: At displacement node pressure variation is maximum. Reason: Displacement and pressure variations are identical.

Show Answer

Assertion true, reason false.

Question 51Assertion-Reason

Assertion: Standing waves have fixed nodes. Reason: Resultant amplitude depends on position.

Show Answer

Both true and reason explains assertion.

Question 52True/False

In a closed pipe, even harmonics are present.

Show Answer

False.

Question 53True/False

In an open pipe, both ends are pressure nodes.

Show Answer

True.

Question 54True/False

Distance between consecutive nodes is λ/4.

Show Answer

False.

Question 55True/False

A node and adjacent antinode are separated by λ/4.

Show Answer

True.

Question 56True/False

Fundamental frequency is the lowest allowed frequency.

Show Answer

True.

Question 57Case Study

A resonance tube has first and second resonance lengths 16 cm and 50 cm. What is wavelength?

Show Answer

Difference = 34 cm = λ/2, so λ = 68 cm.

Question 58Case Study

A flute behaves approximately as an open pipe. Which harmonics are expected?

Show Answer

All harmonics.

Question 59Case Study

A bottle behaves approximately as closed pipe. Which harmonics are expected?

Show Answer

Odd harmonics only.

Question 60Case Study

A water surface closes a resonance tube. What condition is at water surface?

Show Answer

Displacement node, pressure antinode.

Question 61Conceptual

Why is a closed end displacement node?

Show Answer

Air cannot move at the rigid closed end.

Question 62Conceptual

Why is an open end displacement antinode?

Show Answer

Air can move freely at open end.

Question 63Conceptual

Why is harmonic counting tricky in closed pipes?

Show Answer

Allowed modes are 1st, 3rd, 5th harmonics; second mode is third harmonic.

Question 64Conceptual

Can pressure antinode and displacement antinode occur at same point in a sound pipe?

Show Answer

No, they occur oppositely in a standing sound wave.

Mistakes

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing node and antinode: node has zero displacement; antinode has maximum displacement.
  • Confusing pressure node and displacement node: they are opposite in sound columns.
  • Forgetting even harmonics are absent in closed pipe: closed pipe allows 1st, 3rd, 5th...
  • Wrong harmonic counting: second mode of closed pipe is third harmonic.
  • Organ pipe formula mistakes: open pipe uses v/2L; closed pipe uses v/4L for fundamental.
Revision

Quick Revision Notes

  • Standing waves form by superposition of opposite waves.
  • Node: zero displacement.
  • Antinode: maximum displacement.
  • N-N = λ/2.
  • N-A = λ/4.
  • Displacement node = pressure antinode.
  • Displacement antinode = pressure node.
  • Open end: displacement antinode, pressure node.
  • Closed end: displacement node, pressure antinode.
  • Open pipe fn = nv/2L.
  • Closed pipe fn = nv/4L for odd n.
  • Open pipe has all harmonics.
  • Closed pipe has odd harmonics only.
  • Resonance tube successive lengths differ by λ/2.

Contact Kumar Sir

If Nodes, Antinodes or Organ Pipes are not clear and you are looking for a Physics Tutor, contact Kumar Sir.

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