Previous step: Wave Interference.
Concept module
Standing Waves
Track fixed nodes, moving antinodes, and harmonic mode shapes on one live string while the same probe trace shows the underlying oscillation in time.
Interactive lab
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Why it behaves this way
Explanation
A standing wave is what you get when equal waves travel in opposite directions and keep interfering on the same bounded system. Some points cancel all the time, so they become nodes. Other points reinforce most strongly, so they become antinodes.
This lab keeps one string, one live probe, and one authoritative oscillation state in view. The mode-shape graph, the moving string, and the probe trace all come from the same harmonic, which is why mode number, nodes, antinodes, interference, and local oscillation stay tied together.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plansFor the current mode number and string length, what wavelength and oscillation frequency does this standing wave require?
2
1.6 m
1.2 m/s
1. Start from the allowed-mode relations
2. Substitute the live harmonic
3. Compute the allowed oscillation
Current harmonic requirements
Node checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
A standing wave is frozen in place, so nothing is really oscillating once the pattern appears.
The spatial pattern is fixed, but almost every point between the nodes still oscillates up and down in time.
What stays fixed are the node positions and the overall mode shape, not the instantaneous displacement of the string.
Quick test
Misconception check
Question 1 of 4
A student says, "A node is just a place where the whole wave vanished, so nothing interesting is happening there." What is the best correction?
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows a fixed string stretched horizontally with one movable probe marker and a ruler underneath. The string oscillates in one selected harmonic while optional overlays can mark node positions, antinode positions, and the two traveling-wave components that interfere to make the standing pattern.
Changing amplitude, string length, mode number, or probe position immediately updates the same stage, mode-shape graph, and probe-motion graph so the standing-wave state stays synchronized.
Graph summary
The mode-shape graph plots signed standing-wave amplitude scale against position on the string, so zero crossings correspond to nodes and peaks correspond to antinodes.
The probe-motion graph plots the selected point's displacement in time together with its local envelope, which makes node points flatten while antinode points reach the full standing-wave amplitude.
Keep the wave story going
Keep this idea moving
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
Resonance in Air Columns / Open and Closed Pipes
Compare open and closed pipe boundary conditions on one compact air column so standing-wave shapes, missing even harmonics, probe motion, and pressure cues stay tied to the same resonance state.
Damping / Resonance
Explore how damping removes energy, how driving frequency changes amplitude, and why resonance becomes dramatic near the natural frequency.
Oscillation Energy
Watch kinetic and potential energy trade places in simple harmonic motion while the total stays fixed by amplitude and spring stiffness.