Picture a "snapshot" (holding time fixed) of a small cylindrical section of an elastic medium, shown in Fig. 14.6: the cross-sectional area is and the length is . An excess pressure (over and above the ambient pressure existing in the medium at equilibrium) is exerted on the left side and a slightly different pressure on the right. The resulting volume element has a mass , where is the mass density of the medium. If we choose the positive direction to the right, the net force acting on in the direction is .
Now let denote the displacement of particles of the medium from their equilibrium positions. (I didn't use here because I am using that symbol for the area. This may also differ between one end of the cylindrical element and the other: on the left vs. on the right. We assume the displacements to be in the direction but very small compared to , which is itself no great shakes.14.10
The fractional change in volume of the cylinder
due to the difference between the displacements at the
two ends is
Now, any elastic medium is by definition compressible but "fights back"
when compressed () by exerting a pressure in the direction of
increasing volume. The BULK MODULUS is a constant characterizing
how hard the medium fights back - a sort of 3-dimensional analogue
of the SPRING CONSTANT. It is defined by
We now use
on the mass element, giving
If we cancel out of Eq. (35), divide through by
and collect terms, we get
The fact that disturbances in an elastic medium obey the WAVE EQUATION guarantees that such disturbances will propagate as simple waves with phase velocity given by Eq. (37).
We have now progressed from the strictly one-dimensional propagation of a wave in a taut string to the two-dimensional propagation of waves on the surface of water to the three-dimensional propagation of pressure waves in an elastic medium (i.e. sound waves); yet we have continued to pretend that the only simple type of traveling wave is a plane wave with constant . This will never do; we will need to treat all sorts of wave phenomena, and although in general we can treat most types of waves as local approximations to plane waves (in the same way that we treat the Earth's surface as a flat plane in most mechanics problems), it is important to recognize the most important features of at least one other common idealization - the SPHERICAL WAVE.