compression
(noun)
to increase in density; the act of compressing, or the state of being compressed; compaction
Examples of compression in the following topics:
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Longitudinal Waves
- Longitudinal waves, sometimes called compression waves, oscillate in the direction of propagation.
- A sound wave contains pulses, which are the products of compressing the air (or other media) particles.
- Some longitudinal waves are also called compressional waves or compression waves.
- Sound waves are created by the compression of a medium, usually air.
- A compressed Slinky is an example of a longitudinal wave.
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Stress and Strain
- Deformations come in several types: changes in length (tension and compression), sideways shear (stress), and changes in volume.
- (b) Compression: The same rod is compressed by forces with the same magnitude in the opposite direction.
- For very small deformations and uniform materials, $\Delta L$ is approximately the same for the same magnitude of tension or compression.
- For larger deformations, the cross-sectional area changes as the rod is compressed or stretched.
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Elasticity, Stress, and Strain
- (b) Compression: The same rod is compressed by forces with the same magnitude in the opposite direction.
- For very small deformations and uniform materials, ΔL is approximately the same for the same magnitude of tension or compression.
- For larger deformations, the cross-sectional area changes as the rod is compressed or stretched.
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Speed of Sound
- There are two different kinds of sound waves: compression waves and shear waves.
- Compression waves can travel through any media, but shear waves can only travel through solids.
- The speed of a compression wave is determined by the media's compression capacity, shear modulus, and density, while the speed of the shear wave is only determined by the shear modulus and density.
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Application of Bernoulli's Equation: Pressure and Speed
- The Bernoulli equation can be adapted to flows that are both unsteady and compressible.
- However, the assumption of inviscid flow remains in both the unsteady and compressible versions of the equation.
- Compressibility effects depend on the speed of the flow relative to the speed of sound in the fluid.
- Adapt Bernoulli's equation for flows that are either unsteady or compressible
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Springs
- When a spring is stretched/compressed from its equilibrium position by x, its potential energy is give as $U = \frac{1}{2} kx^2$.
- The displacement x is usually measured from the position of "neutral length" or "relaxed length" - the length of spring corresponding to situation when spring is neither stretched nor compressed.
- Red is used extension, blue for compression.
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Fracture
- Bones, on the whole, do not fracture due to tension or compression.
- The behavior of bones under tension and compression is important because it determines the load the bones can carry.
- Overweight people have a tendency toward bone damage due to sustained compressions in bone joints and tendons.
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Characteristics of Sound
- Sound is a longitudinal wave of pressure that travels through compressible medias, which can be solid, liquid, gaseous, or made of plasma.
- Sound is a wave—a longitudinal wave of pressure that travels through compressible medias (i.e., solid, liquid, gaseous, or made of plasma).
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What is a Fluid?
- Solids can be subjected to shear stresses, and normal stresses—both compressive and tensile.
- In contrast, ideal fluids can only be subjected to normal, compressive stress (called pressure).
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Introduction to Two Coupled Masses
- And the force each of these springs transmits is governed by the extent to which the spring is compressed or extended.
- Referring to Figure 1.10, spring 1 can only be compressed or extended if mass 1 is displaced from its equilibrium.
- Now, spring 2 is compressed or stretched depending on whether $x_1 - x_2$ is positive or not.
- Then spring 2 is compressed relative to its equilibrium length and the force on mass 1 will in the negative $x$ direction so as to restore the mass to its equilibrium position.