Superposition, Interference and Standing Waves
Waves: Superposition, Interference and Standing Waves
Superposition, Interference and Standing Waves
Superposition, Interference and Standing Waves
What you'll learn
- State and apply the principle of superposition of waves
- Distinguish constructive from destructive interference using path difference
- Derive the standing wave equation from two counter-propagating waves
- Locate nodes and antinodes using the standing wave formula
- Calculate harmonics for strings and open/closed organ pipes
- Solve JEE numericals on resonance frequencies
Key concepts
Level 1 — Foundations
Principle of Superposition
When two or more waves overlap in a medium, the resultant displacement at any point equals the vector (algebraic) sum of individual displacements:
Waves pass through each other unchanged after superposition.
Interference
| Type | Condition (path difference) | Condition (phase difference) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constructive | Δx = 0, λ, 2λ, ... nλ | Δφ = 0, 2π, 4π, ... 2nπ | Amplitude doubles, intensity 4× |
| Destructive | Δx = λ/2, 3λ/2, ... (2n−1)λ/2 | Δφ = π, 3π, ... (2n−1)π | Amplitude zero, intensity zero |
Standing Waves (qualitative)
When a wave reflects from a fixed boundary and the reflected wave superposes with the incident wave, a standing wave forms. Energy does not travel — it oscillates in place.
- Node: point of zero displacement (always)
- Antinode: point of maximum displacement (= 2A)
- Distance between adjacent nodes = λ/2
- Distance between adjacent antinodes = λ/2
- Distance from node to nearest antinode = λ/4
Level 2 — JEE Depth
Mathematical Derivation of Standing Wave
Take two identical waves travelling in opposite directions:
Adding using sin(P) + sin(Q) = 2 sin((P+Q)/2) cos((P−Q)/2):
This is the standing wave equation. Note:
- Amplitude at position x: 2A sin(kx) — varies with x, not time
- All points oscillate in phase (or 180° out of phase)
Nodes: sin(kx) = 0 → kx = nπ → x = nλ/2 (n = 0, 1, 2, ...)
Antinodes: sin(kx) = ±1 → kx = (2n+1)π/2 → x = (2n+1)λ/4
Harmonics in Stretched Strings (both ends fixed)
Condition: L = nλ/2, so λ_n = 2L/n
- n=1: Fundamental (1st harmonic)
- n=2: 1st overtone (2nd harmonic)
- n=3: 2nd overtone (3rd harmonic)
All harmonics are present. f₂ = 2f₁, f₃ = 3f₁, etc.
Open Organ Pipe (both ends open — antinodes at both ends)
Condition: L = nλ/2
All harmonics present. Fundamental f₁ = v/(2L).
Closed Organ Pipe (one end closed — node at closed, antinode at open)
Condition: L = (2n−1)λ/4
Only odd harmonics present. Fundamental f₁ = v/(4L).
For same length, f₁(open) = 2 × f₁(closed).
End Correction: Real pipes have antinodes slightly beyond the open end. Corrected length = L + 0.6r (r = radius). JEE sometimes includes this.
Resonance: when driving frequency matches natural frequency — large amplitude oscillation.
Worked example
Example 1: String of length 1 m, T = 100 N, μ = 0.01 kg/m — find fundamental frequency
Given: L = 1 m, T = 100 N, μ = 0.01 kg/m
Step 1: Find wave speed on string
v = √(T/μ) = √(100/0.01) = √10000 = 100 m/s
Step 2: Fundamental (n=1) — L = λ/2 → λ = 2L = 2 m
f₁ = v/λ = 100/2 = 50 Hz
Or directly: f₁ = (1/2L)√(T/μ) = (1/2)(100) = 50 Hz
Harmonics: f₂ = 100 Hz, f₃ = 150 Hz, ...
Example 2: Closed organ pipe 0.5 m long, v = 340 m/s — find first three harmonics
Given: L = 0.5 m, v = 340 m/s (closed pipe)
Formula: f_n = (2n−1)v/(4L), odd harmonics only
n=1 (fundamental / 1st harmonic):
f₁ = (1 × 340)/(4 × 0.5) = 340/2 = 170 Hz
n=2 (1st overtone / 3rd harmonic):
f₂ = (3 × 340)/(4 × 0.5) = 1020/2 = 510 Hz
n=3 (2nd overtone / 5th harmonic):
f₃ = (5 × 340)/(4 × 0.5) = 1700/2 = 850 Hz
Ratios: 170 : 510 : 850 = 1 : 3 : 5 ✓ (only odd multiples)
Compare: open pipe of same length would have f₁ = v/(2L) = 340 Hz
(twice the closed pipe fundamental, as expected)
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Using f = nv/(4L) for open pipe | Mixing up open/closed formulas | Closed pipe has node at one end → L = (2n−1)λ/4; open pipe L = nλ/2 |
| Thinking closed pipe has all harmonics | Open pipe intuition applied | Closed pipe: only odd harmonics (1st, 3rd, 5th ...) |
| Forgetting that standing wave amplitude is 2A not A | Overlooking the factor of 2 in derivation | y = 2A sin(kx) cos(ωt); at antinode, displacement goes from −2A to +2A |
| Confusing overtone number with harmonic number | Language ambiguity | 1st overtone of closed pipe = 3rd harmonic (not 2nd) |
Quick check
- Q1 A string has f₁ = 120 Hz. What are its 3rd and 5th harmonic frequencies?
- Q2 An open pipe has fundamental 200 Hz. What length is it? (v = 340 m/s)
- Q3 Standing wave: y = 4 sin(5x) cos(100t) cm. Find amplitude at x = π/10 m and identify node or antinode.
- Q4 A closed pipe and an open pipe have the same fundamental. What is the ratio of their lengths?
- Stretch: Q5 Two strings A and B have same length and tension. String A has mass m, string B has mass 4m. Compare their fundamental frequencies. If they are played together, find the beat frequency if f_A = 300 Hz.
NCERT Chapter 14 link: Section 14.8–14.10 covers superposition, reflection of waves, and standing waves in strings and pipes. The mathematical treatment of standing waves and the organ pipe formulas appear in these sections. NCERT examples include numerical problems on harmonics — review them before tackling JEE past papers.
Exam connections: JEE Main regularly tests: harmonics in strings and pipes, distinguishing open vs closed pipes, reading standing wave equations. JEE Advanced has asked: (a) combination of closed and open pipes, (b) strings with non-uniform density, (c) effect of temperature on resonance frequency of pipes (v changes with T).
Study strategy: Draw the mode shapes (n=1, 2, 3) for both strings and both pipe types on a single page. Label node/antinode positions. This visual map prevents formula mix-ups. Then practise 10 numericals varying L, v, n — aim for 100% accuracy on these before moving to Doppler.
Interactive Exploration Suggestions (Drishti Live Worlds)
- Use the platform-native live simulation: set up a standing wave simulator, vary string length and tension, and observe how mode shapes change.
- Mirror / body / home activity: blow across the mouth of different-length bottles (closed-pipe model) and compare pitches — shorter bottle = higher frequency.
- Voice or text reflection with AI Mentor: explain why a guitar string sounds different at different fret positions even at the same tension.
AI Mentor Prompts (Socratic, Board-Adaptive)
- "Explain why a closed organ pipe only produces odd harmonics, using a drawing of the standing wave modes."
- "What is one common mistake students make when choosing the formula for open vs closed pipes, and how would you avoid it?"
- Stretch: "How do engineers use standing wave principles when designing concert halls or noise-cancelling headphones?"
Gamification, Portfolio & Parent Visibility
- Complete the core practice + one extension activity (photo, table, short reflection, or mini-project) for base XP + topic badge.
- 5-7 day streak or family discussion note = multiplier + visible artifact in parent/principal dashboard.
- Best real-world application stories (anonymised) featured on class or national leaderboard.
Robotics, STEM & Future Skills Bridges
- Build a monochord (a single string stretched over a ruler) and measure the frequencies produced at different fractions of the string length — verify the harmonic series experimentally.
- Future Skill track: AI Mastery / Green Tech — resonance analysis is used in structural health monitoring of bridges and buildings (detecting cracks via frequency shift).
- Coding extension: Write a Python script that plots the first 4 harmonics of a string as standing wave snapshots at t=0, T/4, T/2.
NEP 2020 & Full Education OS Alignment
This material emphasises experiential "learning by doing", competency (apply/create/analyse), vocational exposure, critical thinking, and multidisciplinary connections. Designed to feed live worlds, AI Mentor (with memory), gamification, robotics, parent analytics, and future skills — not just exam prep.
Portfolio Evidence Idea: Your photo/table/reflection/project + one sentence on "How this helps me in real life or a possible future path."
Open the Practice tab for aligned questions (easy/medium/hard + case-based) with full AI scaffolding.
See curriculum for cross-links and the full future-skills/robotics chapters.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice