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Physics · 3.1 General properties of waves · Ripple tank

Ripple Tank. Make waves.

Generate water waves and explore wavelength, frequency and speed (v = fλ). Switch the source to a point (circular waves) or a bar (plane waves) and add a gap to watch diffraction.

0625 Topic 3.1 — Wave properties v = fλ · diffraction
Plane waves — straight wavefronts move across the tank. Adjust frequency & wavelength.

Variables

6.0
3.0
3.0

Live readouts

Frequency f
6.0 Hz
Wavelength λ
3.0 cm
Wave speed v = fλ
18.0 cm/s
Period T = 1/f
0.17 s
Wave speed v = fλ. Diffraction is greatest when the gap width is comparable to the wavelength.
📋 Method (Cambridge ATP procedure)
  1. Set up a ripple tank with a vibrating bar (plane waves) or dipper (circular waves) and a stroboscope/lamp to "freeze" the pattern.
  2. Measure the wavelength by measuring across several wavefronts and dividing.
  3. Read the frequency from the motor; calculate the wave speed v = fλ.
  4. Place barriers with a gap to observe diffraction; vary the gap width relative to λ.

Observations: waves slow and bend over shallow regions; diffraction spreads waves most when the gap ≈ λ.

⚠ Precautions
  • Measure across many wavelengths and divide, to reduce uncertainty.
  • Use a strobe to freeze the motion for clear measurements.
  • Keep the water depth uniform unless investigating refraction.
🎯 Syllabus reference (0625)
  • 3.1 General properties of waves — define wavelength, frequency, wavefront, amplitude and period; recall and use v = fλ; describe the use of a ripple tank to show reflection, refraction and diffraction; describe how diffraction depends on the gap width relative to the wavelength.

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