Waves and Heat Transfer
Waves transfer energy from one place to another without transferring matter. Heat energy is transferred by three mechanisms: conduction, convection, and radiation. Understanding these concepts explains phenomena from sound and light to home insulation and cooking.
What You'll Learn
- Distinguish between transverse and longitudinal waves with examples
- Describe and calculate wave properties: amplitude, frequency, wavelength, wave speed
- Explain conduction, convection, and radiation with everyday examples
- Compare the three methods of heat transfer in terms of mechanism and medium
- Apply knowledge to explain real-world thermal insulation scenarios
- Understand why sound cannot travel through a vacuum
IB Assessment Focus
Criterion A: Define wave types, properties, and heat transfer mechanisms correctly.
Criterion B: Design and analyse experiments on wave properties or thermal insulation.
Criterion C: Use correct vocabulary; explain phenomena using scientific reasoning.
Criterion D: Apply understanding to real-life contexts (building insulation, cooking, medical imaging).
Types of Waves
Waves are disturbances that transfer energy from one location to another. There are two fundamental types based on the direction of vibration relative to the direction of travel.
Transverse Waves
Examples: Light, radio waves, microwaves, water waves, seismic S-waves
Imagine shaking a rope up and down while it moves forward — the rope moves up-down (perpendicular), but the wave travels forward.
Longitudinal Waves
Examples: Sound, seismic P-waves
Imagine pushing a slinky back and forth — the coils compress and expand in the same direction as the wave travels.
Comparison Table
| Feature | Transverse | Longitudinal |
|---|---|---|
| Vibration direction | Perpendicular to travel | Parallel to travel |
| Needs a medium? | No (light travels in vacuum) | Yes (sound needs particles) |
| Examples | Light, radio, water waves | Sound, ultrasound |
| Wave features | Crests and troughs | Compressions and rarefactions |
Wave Properties
All waves can be described using the same set of measurable properties.
Key Wave Properties
| Property | Definition | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Amplitude | Maximum displacement of a particle from its rest position; related to the energy of the wave | metres (m) |
| Wavelength (λ) | Distance between two adjacent identical points (e.g., crest to crest) | metres (m) |
| Frequency (f) | Number of complete waves passing a fixed point per second | Hertz (Hz) |
| Time period (T) | Time for one complete wave to pass a fixed point | seconds (s) |
| Wave speed (v) | Speed at which the wave travels through the medium | metres per second (m/s) |
Amplitude and Energy
- Greater amplitude = more energy carried by the wave
- A louder sound has greater amplitude than a quiet sound
- Higher frequency (for light) corresponds to shorter wavelength and more energy per photon
Heat Transfer
Heat energy always flows from hotter regions to cooler regions. It can be transferred by three distinct mechanisms.
1. Conduction
Mechanism: Hot particles vibrate faster. They bump into neighbouring slower particles, transferring kinetic energy along the material without the particles themselves moving.
Occurs in: Mainly solids; also liquids (slowly)
Example: A metal spoon in hot soup quickly becomes hot. Touching a metal surface feels cold because metal conducts heat away from your hand rapidly.
2. Convection
Mechanism: Hot fluid expands, becomes less dense, and rises. Cooler, denser fluid sinks to replace it, creating a convection current.
Occurs in: Liquids and gases (fluids)
Example: Hot air rises in a room and cool air sinks, circulating around the room. Boiling water in a pot creates convection currents.
3. Radiation
Mechanism: All objects emit electromagnetic radiation. Hotter objects emit more energy. Radiation can travel through a vacuum.
Occurs in: Any medium, including vacuum
Example: The Sun heats the Earth across 150 million km of empty space. You feel heat from a campfire even if you don't touch it.
Comparison Summary
| Method | Medium Required? | State of Matter | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conduction | Yes | Mainly solids | Particle vibration |
| Convection | Yes | Liquids and gases | Bulk fluid movement |
| Radiation | No | Any (including vacuum) | Electromagnetic waves |
Real-World Applications
Understanding waves and heat transfer explains many everyday phenomena and technologies.
Thermal Insulation
- Reducing conduction: Use materials with low thermal conductivity (e.g., fibreglass, foam, wood)
- Reducing convection: Trap air in small pockets so it cannot circulate (e.g., double glazing, bubblewrap)
- Reducing radiation: Use shiny surfaces to reflect infrared radiation (e.g., emergency blankets, thermos flask silvered walls)
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
| Wave Type | Frequency | Wavelength | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radio waves | Lowest | Longest | Broadcasting, communication |
| Microwaves | ↑ | ↓ | Cooking, mobile phones |
| Infrared | ↑ | ↓ | Remote controls, thermal cameras |
| Visible light | ↑ | ↓ | Vision |
| Ultraviolet | ↑ | ↓ | Sterilisation, tanning |
| X-rays | ↑ | ↓ | Medical imaging |
| Gamma rays | Highest | Shortest | Cancer treatment, sterilisation |
All electromagnetic waves travel at the same speed in a vacuum: 3 × 10&sup8; m/s (300,000 km/s).
Worked Examples
These examples show the depth of scientific reasoning expected at Grade 7.
Substituting: v = 500 Hz × 0.68 m
Result: v = 340 m/s
This is approximately the speed of sound in air at room temperature.
1. Reduces conduction: The double-walled glass is a poor conductor. The vacuum between walls prevents conduction entirely.
2. Reduces convection: The vacuum between the walls prevents convection (no fluid to move).
3. Reduces radiation: The inside surfaces are silvered (mirror-like) to reflect infrared radiation back into the flask, preventing it from escaping as radiation.
Together, these features minimise heat loss from the hot drink.
Substituting: f = 1 ÷ 0.01
Result: f = 100 Hz
Practice Q&A
Attempt each question before revealing the model answer.
Longitudinal waves: Sound, ultrasound, seismic P-waves.
Flashcard Review
Tap each card to reveal the answer. Try to answer from memory first.