Starter track
Step 1 of 50 / 5 completeSound and Acoustics
Next after this: Pitch, Frequency, and Loudness / Intensity.
This concept is the track start.
Also in Waves.
Concept module
See sound as a longitudinal wave by keeping parcel motion, compression and rarefaction, probe timing, and energy transfer tied to one compact medium-first bench.
Interactive lab
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Progress
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 1 of 50 / 5 completeNext after this: Pitch, Frequency, and Loudness / Intensity.
This concept is the track start.
Also in Waves.
Why it behaves this way
Sound in a gas or liquid is a longitudinal wave. The disturbance moves through the medium, but the parcels in the medium do not ride across the whole tube with it. They oscillate back and forth around local resting positions while compressions and rarefactions move onward.
This bench keeps one source piston, one particle train, one pressure ribbon, and one movable probe on the same stage. The source and probe timing, the local compression cue, and the right-moving disturbance all come from the same displacement field, so sound stays visually honest without turning into a full acoustics engine.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans2.4 m/s
1.8 m
2.25 m
1.33 Hz
0.94 s
1. Start from the wave timing relations
2. Substitute the live speed, spacing, and probe position
3. Interpret what the source and probe must do
Current sound timing
Compression checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
If the sound wave moves to the right, each air parcel must also drift steadily to the right with it.
The disturbance travels to the right, but each parcel mainly oscillates back and forth around its own equilibrium position.
What moves onward are the compression and rarefaction pattern and the energy transfer through the medium, not one chunk of matter riding all the way across the stage.
Quick test
Misconception check
Question 1 of 4
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows a horizontal tube with a source piston on the left, a row of parcel markers inside the tube, and a movable probe parcel. A colored ribbon inside the tube marks local compression and rarefaction, while optional overlays label parcel-motion direction, compression regions, and the rightward energy-transfer cue.
Changing particle amplitude, wave speed, wavelength, or probe position updates the same stage, probe graphs, and readout card so parcel motion, compression state, and travel delay stay synchronized.
Graph summary
The first graph compares source and probe parcel displacement over time so the downstream delay stays tied to the live sound bench.
The second graph compares the probe parcel's normalized shift with the local compression cue, which helps the learner separate one parcel's position from the local crowding of the medium.
Carry sound into later wave ideas
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Keep one compact sound bench while separating pitch from frequency, loudness from amplitude and an amplitude-squared intensity cue, and probe delay from the source sound itself.
Superpose two nearby sound frequencies, watch the fast carrier sit inside a slower envelope, and connect beat rate to the frequency difference on one compact bench.
Watch a moving sound source compress wavefronts ahead and stretch them behind, then see how source motion and observer motion combine to change the heard pitch on one bounded classical bench.