 -     A   SKEPTICs   GUIDE
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Boundary conditions are probably easiest to illustrate with the system 
of a taut string of length  L  with fixed ends, 
as shown in Fig. 14.4.14.6
Fixing the ends forces the wave function  A(x,t)  to have nodes 
(positions where the amplitude is always zero) at those positions.  
This immediately rules out traveling waves and restricts the simple 
sinusoidal ``modes'' to standing waves for which  L  is 
an integer number of half-wavelengths:14.7
 const, the frequency
 const, the frequency 
  [in cycles per second or Hertz (Hz)] 
of the
  [in cycles per second or Hertz (Hz)] 
of the 
 mode is given by
mode is given by  
 or
  or 
 under tension  F  
we can use Eq. (16 to write what one might 
frivolously describe as  THE GUITAR TUNER'S EQUATION:
  under tension  F  
we can use Eq. (16 to write what one might 
frivolously describe as  THE GUITAR TUNER'S EQUATION: 
Exactly the same formulae apply to sound waves in organ pipes if they are closed at both ends. An organ pipe open at one end must however have an antinode at that end; this leads to a slightly different scheme for enumerating modes, but one that you can easily deduce by a similar sequence of logic.
This sort of restriction of the allowed modes of a system to a discrete set of values is known as QUANTIZATION. However, most people are not accustomed to using that term to describe macroscopic classical systems like taut strings; we have a tendency to think of quantization as something that only happens in QUANTUM MECHANICS. In reality, quantization is an ubiquitous phenomenon wherever wave motion runs up against fixed boundary conditions.
 
 
 
 
