• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Hydromonochord: Visualizing String Vibration by Water Swirls
  • Contributor: Sommer, Wilfried; Meier-Böke, Ralf; Meinzer, Nicholas
  • Published: American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT), 2010
  • Published in: The Physics Teacher, 48 (2010) 6, Seite 370-371
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1119/1.3479710
  • ISSN: 0031-921X; 1943-4928
  • Keywords: General Physics and Astronomy ; Education
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: The hydromonochord is a horizontal vibrating string that just makes contact with the surface of a water bath. The motion of the string sets up a pattern of swirls on the surface of the water, thus complementing the usual pattern of nodes and antinodes. The device is based on the traditional monochord.1 A water basin (Fig. 1) has two slits in the opposite walls on the left-hand side, with the width of the slits equal to the diameter of the string. Consequently, the slits function as fixed bridges and form the nodes of a standing wave. The string is bowed or plucked on the part outside the basin, and the frequency is controlled by the position of the variable bridge on the right-hand end of the string. If the position of this bridge is related in a simple way with the length of the basin, patterns of swirls will occur on the surface of the water, visualizing the vibration of the string. We will present a series of experiments and show how to integrate them into the very first stage of teaching acoustics.