1 and 3 refer to the Doppler effect.
For 2, see http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/l ... r-Addition and http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/l ... ubtraction[/quote]
Thank you for your help.

After you have a firm enough grasp on the concepts, have some battle plan for as many different kinds of word problems as you can stand. Examples are easy to find in both print and on the Internet, but there's more out there than you could reasonably ever get through!acornbob wrote:Does anyone have any studying tips and/or links that might help? We are currently preparing for our state competition in Michigan.
Thanks
Maybe look through the rules and see if there's anything you missed or didn't go in-depth to while you were studying. Remember, you have a whole binder!acornbob wrote:Does anyone have any studying tips and/or links that might help? We are currently preparing for our state competition in Michigan.
Thanks
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1. True 2. 2.5/5=0.5 1/0.5=2 sec The frequency of the wave is equal to the speed divided by the wavelength which is 0.5. The period is the inverse of the frequency which is 2. 3. 0.5 4. Destructive interference is when waves combine where the resulting wave is smaller than the original waves 5. Primary waves 6. A: wavelength, B: distance, C: amplitude 7. B 8. amplitude 9. P-waves 10. B 11. Constructive interference is when waves combine where the resulting wave is bigger than the original waves 12. B 13. Period 14. C 15. B 16. Destructive Interference 17. Gamma 18. UV radiation is used in therapy, but it can damage the skin. 19. thermal-vision 20. B The only differences I can see is that in 2), you did not explain your work, so you would get half-credit. In 6, B was distance. For destructive and constructive interference, the waves don't have to line up. They just have to make each other bigger/smaller. Also, your numbering is off. Well, now all you have to do is upload your answers to the test exchange... or I could do it for you.